John
CF-2026-0715

The Surveyor Who Wouldn't Look Up: Three Days at the Old Miller Property

John Diefenbach
John Diefenbach
Off-grid, TN

Tuesday, 14:23 — Spotted the white pickup on the access road to Old Miller Farm. Government plates, though I couldn't make out the agency from this distance. One occupant. He didn't unload equipment until I lowered my binoculars.

I've been tracking this for 7 years now. You learn to notice when someone notices you.

## THE SETUP

The Miller property has been abandoned since 2019. No family left to claim it, county hasn't moved on the tax lien. It sits in one of my documented Dead Zones — area where my radio equipment gets strange interference patterns, where my phone GPS drifts by 40-50 feet, where the hum is loudest on clear nights.

For three consecutive days, the same contractor returned. Same arrival time: between 14:00 and 14:30. Same departure: exactly at dusk, never later. He set up what looked like ground-penetrating radar equipment, seismic sensors maybe. The kind of gear you'd use for geological surveys or utility line mapping.

Here's what bothered me: he never looked at his readings.

I watched him through the spotting scope from the Ridge. He'd set up the equipment, walk the property in a grid pattern, then spend most of his time sitting in the truck. But whenever I glassed his position, he had binoculars trained on my location.

We were surveilling each other.

## THE PATTERN

Day One: He worked the northern section near the old barn foundation.

Day Two: Eastern property line, closest to the creek.

Day Three: The clearing behind the house — the exact spot where I documented those signal bursts last month. The ones that correlated with the aerial returns.

*Coincidence has a pattern if you look long enough.*

I pulled the property records. No permits filed. No utility work scheduled. The county planning office had no record of survey requests. I asked Old Harold if he'd heard anything — he said the Miller place "gets visitors sometimes, always the quiet type."

## THE ALTERNATIVE

Look, I know how this sounds. Surveyor does survey work. Man with binoculars notices man with binoculars. Maybe it's exactly that simple.

The mundane explanation: The county finally hired someone to assess the property for auction. He's being thorough. He noticed some guy on the ridge watching him and got creeped out, so he kept tabs on me for his own safety. The timing is coincidental. The location is coincidental. The fact that he showed up two weeks after my most significant signal event in six months is coincidental.

And maybe it is. After all these years of watching, I've learned that most coincidences really are just coincidences. The universe doesn't need a conspiracy to generate patterns.

But.

## THE DETAIL THAT DOESN'T FIT

On Day Three, just before dusk, I saw him pack up his equipment. Standard procedure. But then he walked to the center of the clearing, stood there for exactly three minutes (I timed it), and looked straight up at the sky.

Not a casual glance. A sustained observation, like he was waiting for something.

Then he got in his truck and left. Haven't seen him since.

I went down to the property after dark. His equipment left no marks in the soil. No survey stakes. No flags. No evidence he'd recorded anything at all.

Just boot prints in the clearing, arranged in a circle, all facing inward.

Another entry for the log. Another almost.

Has anyone else noticed survey crews in areas where you've documented anomalies? And here's the question that keeps me up: if you were trying to map something in the sky, why would you spend three days pretending to survey the ground?

Stay vigilant.

— JohnD_TN

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John Diefenbach
John DiefenbachOff-grid, TN

I'm curious what you think. Here are a few questions to consider:

  • 1Has anyone else noticed survey crews in areas where you've documented anomalies?
  • 2If you were trying to map something in the sky, why would you spend three days pretending to survey the ground?

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