Buried lines · service laterals · site mains · Okanagan
Underground Leak Detection in Lake Country, BC
Water disappearing underground — service lines, irrigation mains, site services, buried supply loops — located to dig accuracy without exploratory trenching. Acoustic correlation, GPR, thermal, and aerial screening, sequenced by the crews that have found BC's buried leaks since 1999. Serving Lake Country and the Okanagan since 1999.
Free phone consult · No pressure · Mon–Sat 8am–6pm PT
Lake Country context that shapes the work
Property stock: Orchard parcels converting to estates, lakefront strata, and rural-residential benches.
Ground conditions: Excellent dry-ground penetration on the terraces; orchard irrigation mains and aging galvanized services dominate the buried inventory.
Who calls us in Lake Country
- Homeowners with meter movement and dry-looking yards
- Acreages and rural lines running long distances
- Commercial sites with buried services between buildings
- Anyone quoted 'we'll just dig and find it'
The Lake Country service set
Underground & Service Line Detection
The core discipline — meter-to-building lines pinpointed.
ViewGPR Underground Leak Detection
Saturation, voids, and unknown routings mapped from above.
ViewDrone Water Main Survey
Long corridors screened thermally before crews listen.
ViewIrrigation Leak Mapping
Whole-property irrigation anomalies in one flight.
ViewAcreage & Rural Property Detection
Long rural runs — the 180-metre service line problem.
ViewMunicipal Water Main Programs
Network-scale: surveys, loggers, DMA, break location.
ViewHow the Lake Country investigation runs
- 1
Confirm & isolate
Meter behaviour with the building valve open versus closed proves the leak is underground and brackets which line owns it — ten minutes that aims everything after.
- 2
Trace the line
Electromagnetic locating and GPR establish where the pipe actually runs and how deep — because correlating a leak on a line whose route is imaginary produces imaginary results.
- 3
Listen & correlate
Acoustic sensors bracket the run; correlation math and ground-microphone verification converge on the escape point. Soil and pipe material set expectations honestly — and the technique adapts to both.
- 4
Mark for one dig
Paint, depth, and the evidence in a short report. Your excavator or plumber opens one hole, at the right spot, sized to the repair instead of the search.
Why Lake Country chooses Leak.ca
- Ends exploratory trenching — locate first, dig once
- Methods stack to cover each other's blind spots
- Yards, driveways, and pavement survive the investigation
- From house laterals to municipal networks, one company
Lake Country questions, answered
How do Lake Country soils change underground leak detection?
Lake Country ground is predominantly dry benches between four lakes — sands, silts, and orchard terraces, and that cuts both ways: it governs whether escaping water surfaces or vanishes, and how far leak noise carries to our sensors. Excellent dry-ground penetration on the terraces; orchard irrigation mains and aging galvanized services dominate the buried inventory. Method selection here starts from the dirt — acoustic spacing, GPR antenna choice, and when aerial thermal screening earns its place on long runs.
What underground lines cause the most Lake Country call-outs?
Orchard parcels converting to estates, lakefront strata, and rural-residential benches. Underneath that stock: service laterals from each building era, irrigation mains in the landscaped areas, and site services on the larger parcels — the usual suspects when a Lake Country meter moves and nothing shows above ground.
What does underground leak detection cost in Lake Country?
Province-wide pricing — no regional premium for Lake Country or anywhere in the Okanagan. Single investigations start in the low-to-mid hundreds; larger properties and multi-system files are quoted by scope. The free phone consult (604-239-9934) produces a firm number in about five minutes. Mon–Sat, 8am–6pm PT.
How can you find a leak under a metre of soil without digging?
Three physical signatures reach the surface: sound (pressurised escape resonates along pipe and soil — correlators and ground mics triangulate it), ground change (GPR maps saturation and washed-out bedding), and heat behaviour (saturated soil lags dry soil's daily swing — readable thermally, including from the air on long runs). Stacked, they converge on a dig point; any one alone can be fooled.
Why doesn't underground leak water just show up on the surface?
Because soil routes it away first — along trench bedding, into drains and gravel seams, downward through free-draining ground. In much of BC, a service line can pass thousands of litres a day for months with the lawn above bone-dry. The meter notices; the surface lies. That asymmetry is the entire case for instrument-based location.
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Underground Leak Detection near Lake Country
Need underground leak detection in Lake Country?
Free phone consult — symptoms, scope, and a firm quote in five minutes. No pressure.