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What a Platypus Can Teach Us About Site Risk
This morning, as I sipped my second cup of coffee and idly scrolled through LinkedIn, I stumbled across a post about platypus conservation efforts in Australia. At first, it felt completely disconnected from the world I live in—construction sites, airports, major infrastructure projects, and the complex environments that dominate my daily thoughts. Then one sentence stopped me cold: "Protecting a hard-to-detect species starts with a map, a baseline, and a plan made before dis

THE FLYING LIZARD
Jun 112 min read


The Worst Time to Document Evolving Conditions Is After They Are Gone
The Real Danger Isn’t Sudden Failure — It’s Silent Drift Most operational environments don’t collapse overnight. They erode gradually, almost invisibly, until the new normal becomes dangerously accepted. A walkway slowly narrows. Temporary storage creeps into movement paths. Material staging expands beyond its boundaries. Equipment shifts position, sightlines vanish, and traffic flows reroute themselves in quiet workarounds. Crews adapt day by day until friction feels routine

THE FLYING LIZARD
May 102 min read


When a Claim Happens, Resolution Isn’t What Matters
M odern construction teams love resolution. 4K aerials. Centimeter-accurate orthomosaics. High-density point clouds. The assumption is simple: The clearer the image, the stronger the protection. It isn’t. When a claim surfaces — whether tied to drainage, adjacent property damage, staging encroachment, access interference, or third-party impact — resolution becomes secondary. What matters is structure. What Actually Happens During a Claim In a dispute, no one is impressed by y

THE FLYING LIZARD
Mar 12 min read
THE DRONE BUZZ
THE FLYING LIZARD FIELD NOTES
Re-writing The Skies
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