Drone Leak Investigation · Fraser Valley
Irrigation System Leak Mapping in Mission, BC
Golf courses, sports fields, parks, and agricultural operations — buried irrigation leaks, broken laterals, and chronic overwatering zones mapped across the whole property in one flight instead of weeks of walking. Flown by Transport Canada-certified RPAS pilots and confirmed by the ground crews serving Mission and the Fraser Valley region — since 1999 as BC's leak detection specialists.
Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT
Flying Mission: local context
Hillside homes and floodplain industry — terrain that makes ground access slow is exactly where aerial wins.
Local property profile: Hillside homes with long gravity-fed service runs, heritage downtown, and floodplain industry.
Ground conditions: Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable.
Typical irrigation system leak mapping work around Mission
- Hillside roof surveys
- Industrial flat inspections
- Golf courses and turf operations
- Municipal parks and sports fields
- Agricultural irrigation networks
How the Mission survey runs
- 1
System review
Irrigation as-builts, zone maps, and the operator's trouble list focus the survey — which zones run long, where pressure sags, what the water bill says.
- 2
Property flight
Thermal and visual capture across the full irrigated area in the right moisture-contrast window — typically pre-dawn or evening, after a defined dry-down period.
- 3
Moisture anomaly mapping
Saturated zones that should be dry (leaks, stuck valves, broken laterals) and dry zones that should be wet (blockages, failed heads) are mapped and keyed to the zone-and-valve layout.
- 4
Operator report
A property-wide moisture map with ranked repair targets — the superintendent or parks crew fixes from a list, not from symptoms.
Mission questions, answered
How does aerial imaging find buried irrigation leaks?
Two signals, flown together. Thermal shows soil moisture directly — a leaking lateral keeps its surrounding soil saturated and thermally distinct through dry-down periods. Visual imagery shows the vegetation response — the lush stripe over a leak, the stressed patch behind a blockage. Where both signals agree, confidence is high enough to dig.
How much water does a leaking irrigation system actually lose?
A single broken lateral can pass thousands of litres per irrigation cycle, invisibly, for an entire season — multiplied across a property with hundreds of zones. Under metered municipal rates and summer watering restrictions, operators consistently find the survey pays for itself in one billing cycle when it catches even one significant leak.
When is the best time to fly an irrigation survey?
During the irrigation season, after a scheduled dry-down — long enough that properly functioning zones have surface-dried while leak-fed soil stays wet. Pre-dawn flights give the cleanest thermal contrast. We coordinate the dry-down schedule with your superintendent so the survey reads true.
Can you legally fly drone leak surveys in Mission?
Yes — our pilots hold Transport Canada RPAS certification with advanced-operations capability, and Mission flights run under whatever airspace authorizations the location requires. Hillside homes and floodplain industry — terrain that makes ground access slow is exactly where aerial wins. Flight planning, NOTAM checks, and authorizations are part of the service, not your problem.
How do Mission ground conditions affect what the survey reads?
Mission ground is predominantly steep till and bedrock benches above Fraser floodplain. Hillside till scans well between rock outcrops; the floodplain industrial flats are wetter. Slope properties put services shallow and traceable. For buried-leak work that matters: escaping water changes the moisture and thermal behaviour of exactly that ground, and our analysts interpret the surface signal against the local soil character — then our acoustic ground crews confirm the suspect zones before anyone digs.
What does irrigation system leak mapping cost in Mission?
Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Mission. Single-site surveys typically start in the high hundreds; network corridors, portfolios, and multi-asset programs are quoted by scope. The free phone consult (604-239-9934) produces a firm number in about five minutes.
Other drone leak services in Mission
Underground Water Main Leak Survey in Mission
Aerial thermal screening of buried water mains and service corridors — kilometres of distribution line surveyed per flight, leak-suspect zones mapped for targeted ground confirmation. The screening layer that shrinks non-revenue water programs from guesswork to a short list.
View serviceStormwater Pond & Outfall Leak Survey in Mission
Detention ponds, retention facilities, outfalls, and culverts surveyed for exfiltration, berm seepage, and bypass flow — the drainage infrastructure nobody can see failing until something downstream floods or erodes.
View serviceAerial Moisture Orthomosaic Mapping in Mission
The deliverable layer: survey-grade, georeferenced moisture orthomosaics — radiometric thermal fused with RTK photogrammetry — exported to CAD and GIS for engineers, consultants, and owners who need leak evidence they can measure from.
View servicePipeline & Right-of-Way Leak Screening in Mission
Water transmission lines, effluent and process pipelines, and utility rights-of-way screened by air — thermal anomalies, vegetation stress, and surface change along kilometres of linear asset, flown on a schedule ground patrols can't match.
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Irrigation System Leak Mapping near Mission
Need irrigation system leak mapping in Mission?
Free phone consult — site, access, airspace, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.