Stewardship: what accountability includes
Equipment alone is a purchase. Stewardship is the part where someone stays responsible for the water and proves it in writing.

What it includes
- The service visits. Scheduled maintenance, seasonal transitions, and winterization. It's powered equipment near water, and handling it is our job. Your side of the maintenance rounds to nothing, by design.
- The sensors. Calibration checks at every visit, because every claim we make rests on the readings. The protocol is public at how we measure.
- The reporting. Plain-language reports against your measured baseline, written to be forwarded to a board, a committee, or the family group chat exactly as we send them.
- The accountability. If a curve isn't moving, you hear it from us first, with what we think is happening and what we're changing. That conversation is part of the service.
What success looks like
Less intervention over time. A chemical calendar compounds; a restored pond needs progressively less from everyone. Stewardship costs are transparent in the written plan, and the measurements show whether the relationship is earning its keep.
See what your water is doing.
An assessment starts with a measurement. A specialist profiles your water and you keep the numbers.