Every bench exposes chapters of stress, weathering, and excavation. We log discontinuities, water stains, and mineral seams, then plot wedge and toppling possibilities against planned viewpoints. A short delay with a compass clinometer and tape can prevent decades of fencing, retrofits, and uneasy detours.
Seepage lines, iron bacteria, and damp talus recolor maps more honestly than any archived plan. By tracing seasonal springs and perched horizons, we place drains, boardwalks, and diversions where they serve safety first, preserving puddle joy yet avoiding ice lenses and slope-softening saturation.
Old photos, blast logs, and a long-retired foreman’s anecdotes often reveal buried haul roads, unexpected backfill pockets, and habits of runoff that CAD lines never confess. Respecting that memory turns walkability studies into trust building, aligning community nostalgia with contemporary duty of care.