Bernard is right that GPS is accurate within a margin of error that's not precise enough for some purposes.
I've been looking at various smartphone apps for doing my plotting on the ground. There are many out there to choose from, and I cannot yet speak to which work for this kind of thing. Give me another couple of months and I'll have more to say about it, as we work to lay out our homestead.
Michigan girl in Oz, soon to be back in the US.
Peter Ellis wrote:
I happen to be about to move on to 20 acres of wooded land, where line of sight for trying to position things is hopeless - you can't see the trees for the forest, that sort of thingI've been looking at various smartphone apps for doing my plotting on the ground. There are many out there to choose from, and I cannot yet speak to which work for this kind of thing. Give me another couple of months and I'll have more to say about it, as we work to lay out our homestead.
I'm tempted to factor hiring professionals into the cost of purchasing my land. I've got my eye on services like what Darren Doherty's mob provides. They take care of mapping as well as the actual earthworks, from what I can see. It depends how easy/cost-effective/non-disastrous it would be for a newbie to pick up.

Bella Simple wrote:Aaaaand I just realised if I post from my computer rather than my phone, it uses my old username! OP here. My bad.
Peter Ellis wrote:I would love to have a tool that would allow me to work with satellite imagery and layer on the various elements of my design
http://www.1880farm.com Central Texas, USDA Zone 8b, Temperate Grassland, 34″ annual rain, 52 acres of bottom land, with approx 4-5 acres in young woodland and 2.2 acres in ponds (or tanks, as they are called in Texas)
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