Who it's for · Cottage & seasonal

Your cottage is alone forty weeks a year.

The off-season is one long unsupervised stretch where a small failure has months to compound. Most cottage damage isn't dramatic — it's slow, quiet, and discovered in May.

What the off-season does to a building

A pinhole leak in October is a stain by December and a structural repair by spring. A furnace that quits in a cold snap turns plumbing into shrapnel within days. A power outage you never heard about resets thermostats and silences sump pumps. None of it announces itself — closing weekend you lock a healthy building, opening weekend you find out what happened in between.

Supervision instead of drive-bys

Periodic check-ins — a neighbour with a key, a monthly drive — sample a continuous risk at random moments. Sensors don't sleep: water flow, leak points, indoor temperature, and the health of the devices themselves, all watched continuously, all assessed by a human when something deviates. When a signal is real, you get a call wherever you are, and with your authorization, someone local is dispatched. The building stops being alone.