
strategic upstream sensors - stream height, soil saturation, and rainfall -
give downstream homes hours of warning instead of minutes.
A storm stalls over the ridge upstream - miles away, while your sky stays clear. The creek behind the house starts climbing anyway. In the high country, water arrives fast: a creek can top its banks in under an hour, cutting off access, undermining foundations, flooding lower levels, and threatening wells and septic - often before anyone knows it's happening.
We watch the water before it reaches you. By placing sensors strategically upstream - monitoring stream height, soil saturation, and rainfall along the watershed above a property - we can see a flood taking shape while your own ground is still dry.
Those upstream readings are the whole point: they turn what would be minutes of warning into hours.
That head start is what makes action possible - time to move vehicles, cut power, close valves, or get people to high ground. Because every property sits in its own terrain, we design where the sensors go around your specific stream reach and the slopes that feed it, then tie them into alerts that reach you wherever you are.
flood-specific insights are on the way. in the meantime, see how continuous monitoring changes the picture across water, power, and radon.