




Dock wiring jobs at lake properties are not always straightforward. When you're working on a sloped, wooded lot with tight access around stairs and structure, you can't just roll equipment in and call it easy. This one at Lake Tahoma was a hand-dig situation from start to finish.
Our crew worked the hillside manually - digging the trench run from the house all the way down to the dock by hand. Rocky soil, tree roots, tight clearance next to the dock structure. That's just part of the job when you're committed to running wire the right way rather than cutting corners to save time. The locator flags you can see in the trench line show the care we put into marking the run before any backfill happens.
Inside the dock structure itself, we ran conduit along the ceiling and installed recessed lighting in the tongue-and-groove wood ceiling. Clean work in a tight space. Conduit keeps everything protected from the moisture environment you deal with on any lake property, and the recessed cans give the space a finished look without anything hanging loose or exposed.
Dock electrical work has real safety stakes. Water and electricity don't mix, and a dock wired improperly is a genuine hazard - not just a code issue. We take that seriously on every lake job, whether it's a simple outlet circuit or a full power and lighting setup like this one.
If your dock or lake property needs electrical work - new circuits, lighting, a full power run from the house - we're set up to handle all of it. Boat dock wiring is one of those jobs where experience matters, and we've put in the work to do it right.