R E A L E STAT E In the four-wheel-drive area of Carova, professional land surveyor Jamie Furr spends a lot of time playing in the sand (i.e., digging holes) in order to capture the precise measurements that are crucial to his job. Photo courtesy of Helen Furr.
Survey says? Pirates, snakes and wild horses are all part of a dayâs work for local land surveyors.
The Lay of the
Land BY STEVE HANF
WHEN JAMIE FURR SETS UP HIS SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS to dial in those precise measurements and mark property boundaries, heâs completing painstaking and exacting work. But just how painful and exactly how crazy the work will be depends on the day and the location, especially when he finds himself in the four-wheel-drive area of Carova. Sometimes, itâs an inquisitive homeowner wanting to know what heâs doing on their property. âOur favorite joke as a surveyor is to say, âThis is where the tunnel from Norfolkâs coming through,ââ Jamie says with a laugh. âTheir response immediately tells you who youâre dealing with â the person either laughs and you share a few giggles and move on, or the person gets quite irate, like youâre the worst person in the world.â For those who can laugh it off, the next question often involves pirate lore: Is Jamie getting any closer to finding that X on the treasure map? âYeah, Iâve been looking for 25 years, and I havenât seen any buried treasure yet,â Jamie says goodnaturedly. âI did find an old fiberglass pirate like you would see at Jolly Roger or a putt-putt course one time while I was doing a survey in Corolla. It looked like it had been there for at least 30 years.â
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When Jamie made that discovery on a vacant lot near the Whalehead Club, he took several photos, and then took it home â where the pirate continues to scare visitors to this day. âThatâs probably the coolest thing Iâve ever found,â Jamie says. âIâm still waiting for somebody to accuse me of stealing it!â Treasure aside, the job of a professional land surveyor is mainly supposed to be pretty tame and straightforward: Using landmarks, GPS, maps and other instruments, Eastern Geomatics, PLLC â Jamieâs company â and a number of local land surveyors mark boundaries for construction sites, make sure people arenât putting their pools or fences on their neighborsâ property, and ensure that the myriad of ordinances for every local municipality are being followed before projects begin. Itâs still the type of work that can come with its own unique set of challenges, however. By way of example, Jamie recalls one story of a surveyor who missed the mark on a relatively nondescript sandy lot in Carova. The lot was staked. The house was built. The proud owners came to see their new house â and promptly told the surveyor that it wasnât on their lot. Luckily, surveyors have insurance for that kind of thing. But despite curious people, and the discovery of unusual property markers like gun barrels and car axles, the biggest challenges local surveyors tend to face come from the resident wildlifeâŚespecially in Carova. Everybody loves Currituckâs famed wild horses, right? Not so much for Jamie, whose expensive equipment seems to draw members of the herd faster than a visitor with a forbidden carrot. âOne time I was 300 yards away from my instruments, and next thing I knew I had six horses jumping up and kicking each other as they ran around my equipment,â Jamie says. âSometimes you just have to stand and watch it go down â and hold your breath hoping nothing else happens.â Jamie will not, however, stand by idly when the water moccasins come out to play. Heâs had days when the snakes were so bad they forced him to leave a job siteâŚand other days when heâs tromped through marshy waist-high weeds in snake chaps. âI always say, âWell, at least I wonât die from a snake bite â Iâll just die from the heart attack when I see a snake attached to my chap,ââ Jamie explains ruefully. Countless ticks, wildlife encounters and disgruntled residents â there are some good things about being a land surveyor, right? Luckily, for Jamie, the answer is a clear yes. Jamie graduated from the University of North Carolina in Wilmington with an environmental science degree before eventually training to become a surveyor. For more than a dozen years now, heâs worked for others and for himself, dealt with building booms and busts, and put in the long, hard hours to learn the lay of the land all over the Outer Banks. Itâs a profession thatâs hard to get into thanks to the need for a bachelorâs degree and years of experience before being allowed to sit for the state exams. Jamie jokes that surveyor conferences filled with guys in their 60s and 70s only make him realize that heâs doomed to never retire. And yet... âIâm just not cut out to sit in a cubicle, thatâs for sure,â Jamie says. âI tell people all the time that the best thing about my job is that Iâm in a different location every day, and every day is different. âIf Iâm driving up the beach on a nice sunny morning, it can be bumper to bumper even up there, but itâs not like being bumper to bumper in Chesapeake,â he adds with a smile. âSome people have it a hell of a lot worse when it comes to commutes.â