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Drone Leak Investigation · Peace Country

Reservoir & Dam Seepage Detection in Fort St. John, BC

Thermal and visual reconnaissance of earthen dams, dikes, reservoirs, and embankments — seepage exit points, wet zones on downstream faces, and anomalous vegetation mapped without crews walking unstable slopes. Flown by Transport Canada-certified RPAS pilots and confirmed by the ground crews serving Fort St. John and the Peace Country region — since 1999 as BC's leak detection specialists.

640×512
Radiometric resolution
Full face
Embankment coverage per flight
0 contact
Crew exposure on slopes

Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT

Flying Fort St. John: local context

Peace-region energy sector — camps, yards, and processing assets; cold-season flights planned around northern conditions.

Local property profile: Energy-sector service city — industrial yards, work camps, and newer subdivisions built to northern frost specs.

Ground conditions: Clay attenuation plus metre-plus frost defines northern survey planning — summer windows give the best returns, and frost-depth services sit deeper than anywhere else in BC.

Typical reservoir & dam seepage detection work around Fort St. John

  • Energy-facility thermal scans
  • Camp and yard roof surveys
  • Earthen dams and saddle dams
  • Dikes and flood-protection embankments
  • Water supply and irrigation reservoirs

How the Fort St. John survey runs

  1. 1

    Structure briefing

    Drawings, prior inspection reports, and known wet areas frame the survey. We coordinate with the owner's dam-safety engineer so the data lands inside their existing surveillance program.

  2. 2

    Thermal face mapping

    Groundwater and seepage water hold a stable temperature year-round while surfaces swing with the weather — exit points and wet zones contrast clearly in the right window. The full downstream face, abutments, and toe are mapped in one flight.

  3. 3

    Visual + vegetation pass

    High-resolution visual imagery captures the classic secondary indicators: preferentially green vegetation strips, cattail colonisation, soft-ground texture, and animal-burrow activity along the toe.

  4. 4

    Georeferenced report

    Thermal anomalies and visual indicators plotted on the structure, compared against any previous survey, and delivered in a format your engineer-of-record can take straight into the surveillance file.

Fort St. John questions, answered

How does thermal imaging find seepage on a dam?

Seepage water originates underground, where temperature is stable — roughly 8–12 °C in much of BC — while the embankment surface follows air temperature. In warm weather a seep reads cold against the face; in cold snaps it reads warm. Flown in the right contrast window, exit points and saturated zones stand out measurably, including early-stage wet areas a walking inspection can miss.

Does this replace our dam safety inspections?

No, and we will not pretend otherwise. BC dam owners operate under the Dam Safety Regulation with defined surveillance obligations run by their engineer-of-record. What we provide is reconnaissance data — full-face, repeatable, georeferenced — that makes those inspections better targeted, and a safe way to look at faces and toes that are hazardous to walk.

Can you survey dikes and flood embankments too?

Yes — linear flood-protection works are ideal drone subjects: long, uniform, and tedious to walk. Kilometres of dike face and toe are mapped per flight day, with anomalies geotagged for follow-up. Post-freshet and post-storm baselines are the common triggers in BC.

Can you legally fly drone leak surveys in Fort St. John?

Yes — our pilots hold Transport Canada RPAS certification with advanced-operations capability, and Fort St. John flights run under whatever airspace authorizations the location requires. Peace-region energy sector — camps, yards, and processing assets; cold-season flights planned around northern conditions. Flight planning, NOTAM checks, and authorizations are part of the service, not your problem.

How do Fort St. John ground conditions affect what the survey reads?

Fort St. John ground is predominantly Peace plateau clays with deep seasonal frost. Clay attenuation plus metre-plus frost defines northern survey planning — summer windows give the best returns, and frost-depth services sit deeper than anywhere else in BC. 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 reservoir & dam seepage detection cost in Fort St. John?

Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Fort St. John. 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.

Need reservoir & dam seepage detection in Fort St. John?

Free phone consult — site, access, airspace, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.

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