We Build the System That Catches the Fire First

Why We Exist

A wildfire is cheapest to stop in its first minutes. Yet most detection still depends on someone happening to see smoke and call it in — and by the time a crew is rolling, a spark has become a front. The drones to watch a high-risk zone already exist. What's missing is the intelligence to fly a whole fleet of them as one team, around the clock, and put a confirmed alert in front of a crew the moment something starts.

So we build that. A Drone Company builds Maestro Fire — an autonomous wildfire-detection system. A fleet patrols the zones you define, spots smoke and heat early, and sends a second drone to confirm the hotspot before the operator is alerted. One operator runs the whole fleet. It's a fire-detection system, not a drone — the aircraft is just how the watch gets airborne.

Underneath sits Maestro, our autonomous platform for drone fleets: it flies the fleet as one team, keeps each drone working when the link drops, and shares one live picture across the fleet. We point that engine at wildfire because it's where minutes matter most — and because protecting homes and wildland shouldn't demand a seven-figure budget or a control room full of pilots. Give a team a system that watches a zone autonomously and alerts only on a confirmed start, and you turn detection from luck into coverage.

What We Believe

Early beats everything.

The whole game is the minutes between ignition and a front. A system that watches a high-risk zone continuously and catches a start early is worth more than any amount of capability brought to bear too late.

The system watches. The operator decides.

We don't take humans out of the loop — we give them better information, faster. The fleet flies the patrol, confirms a hotspot with a second drone, and surfaces what matters. A person makes the call to act, every time.

Autonomy has to hold when the link drops.

The high-risk edge is exactly where signal is worst — behind a ridge, deep in wildland. So the autonomy runs onboard each drone: the fleet keeps watching and stays coordinated even when the link to the ground is thin or gone.

Want to Work With Us?

We're building the autonomous watch that catches wildfires first. Get in touch.

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