You bought a house near the foothills and want to put up a new fence. You look at the old wooden posts. They look straight enough. You assume they mark the edge of your land. That is a mistake. Those old posts might be off by inches or even feet. Neighbors build things over the line all the time. Sometimes they do it by accident. Sometimes they do not. If you build your new fence based on a bad assumption, you might have to tear it down later. This is the exact moment you open your phone and search for a property line surveyor near me. The results pop up immediately. You see a dozen companies with similar names. Picking the right one matters because the high-altitude terrain out here presents unique challenges. The Problem with Mountain Metro Soil The ground around the Front Range shifts. Expansive clay soils expand when wet and shrink when dry. This movement cracks driveways and warps retaining walls. It also moves old property markers. A piece of rebar pounded into the dirt fifty ye...