The Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) waives the sovereign immunity of the United States for certain tort claims “accruing on or after January 1, 1945 ... under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act ... occurred.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Under the FTCA’s limited waiver of sovereign immunity, “[a] tort claim against the United States shall be forever barred unless it is presented in writing to the appropriate Federal agency within two years after such claim accrues ....” Id. § 2401(b). This Government appeal presents the question of whether § 2401(b) bars Plaintiffs’ FTCA claim against the United States for damages to mining property caused by World War II weapons testing. While not condoning the Government’s abysmal failure over the past half-century to clean up the test site, we hold § 2401(b) bars Plaintiffs’ FTCA claim for money damages. Accordingly, the district court erred in entering judgment for Plaintiffs. We reverse and remand with directions to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
I.
In 1945 near the end of World War II, the United States Army conducted conventional high explosive, chemical, and incendiary weapons testing on Jesse F. Cannon’s property located in the remote Dugway Mining District of Tooele County, Utah. The property is a part of the ‘Tel-low Jacket Area,” and sits adjacent to the Army’s Dugway Proving Ground (DPG). The property consists of over 1,416 acres encompassing 86.5 patented mining claims. The purpose of the Army’s testing was to explore means of battling Japanese forces entrenched in caves in the Pacific Islands. Prior to testing, Cannon secured a written agreement from the Army in which Cannon agreed to the Army’s use of his property in exchange for the Army’s promise to “leave the property of the owner in as good condition as *1185it is on the date of the government’s entry.” 1
The Army failed to keep its promise to clean up Cannon’s property. In September 1945, Cannon reentered his property and found the testing had damaged his mines.2 That same month, Cannon successfully filed an administrative claim against the Government to compensate him for cessation of mining operations “due to the use of toxic chemical agents and explosive munitions.” The Government paid Cannon $755.48 on his first claim. In October 1945, Cannon filed a second successful administrative claim for destruction of mine shaft timbering due to “the use of toxic chemical agents, incendiaries, and explosive munitions.” The Government paid Cannon $2,064 on his second claim. Nearly five years later in July 1950, Cannon submitted a third claim against the Government. To support his third claim, Cannon submitted a statement which read in part:
I realize that when I accepted this $2064 payment from the Government it constituted full satisfaction for the claim against the Government for damages done to the Yellow Jacket Mine. However, I did not believe at that time that the chemical agents used by the Army would remain in the workings and make it impossible for me to ever operate the mine again without some sort of decontamination of the underground workings .... It is now five years since the Army dropped their poison gas bombs on the mine and I am certain that there is still a concentration of poison gas present in the mine that would preclude its operation by anybody without some sort of decontamination. I do not know if the gas is present in dangerous quantities or even if the odorous material present is a poison gas but I do know that the miners who have looked at the property with a view of taking a lease have shied away when they learned of the Army’s use of the mine.... I believe[ ] that it would require about $5000 to put the mine in condition to be worked again.
In 1951, the Government denied Cannon’s third claim without further complaint.
Jesse F. Cannon’s son, Dr. J. Floyd Cannon, acquired the property in 1954 with knowledge of ordnance contamination on the property. Around 1957, Dr. Cannon conveyed a 75% interest in the property to his four children, retaining a 25% interest. Over the next few years, Dr. Cannon made numerous trips onto the property and each time found exploded and unexploded surface bombs and weapon fragments. Dr. Cannon reportedly requested the DPG to clean up the property on multiple occasions, but never filed any claim or grievance against the Government.
In the late 1970s, the Government conducted a comprehensive study of contami*1186nated lands at the DPG. In 1979, the Government issued a detailed report of its study. United States Army Toxic and Hazardous Materials Agency, Report No. 140, Installation Assessment of Bugway Proving Ground (1979). The report noted testing had occurred in the Yellow Jacket Area adjacent to DPG: “The Yellow Jacket Area ... was used in the 1940’s ... to test munitions containing chemical agents, incendiaries, and high explosives. Complete documentation is lacking in this area.” The report recommended that (1) “DPG better define the hazards and problems of UXO [unexploded ordnance] at ... the Yellow Jacket Area,” and (2) “action by DPG be expedited to better define the extent of the test site[ ] within the ... Yellow Jacket Area[ ], and to bring [this] area[ ] under proper control.” Dr. Cannon apparently was not aware of the report upon his death in 1980.
In 1980, Dr. Cannon’s four children, Mary Alice, Margaret Louise, Allan Robert, and Douglas F. Cannon, inherited the remainder of the property. In 1988, the Government issued an update to its 1979 report. United States Army Toxic and Hazardous Materials Agency, Update of the Initial Installation Assessment of Bugway Proving Ground (1988). Regarding the Yellow Jacket Area, the unclassified report stated the area—
was identified in the [1979 report] as a test area for various unidentified chemical agents, fire bombs, rockets, and smoke and mortar rounds during the 1940s.... Discussion with long-time employees indicate that the surface UXOs [unexploded ordnance] and empty containers were cleared from the area but some subsurface UXOs could exist.... Due to an absence of records, DPG has not been able to better define the activities or exact locations where they occurred in the Yellow Jacket Area. The installation is to withdraw this area from ... the Public Domain, and permanently add it to the current DPG land holdings because it is potentially contaminated from past Army activities....
The report reiterated the Yellow Jacket Area was “potentially contaminated with hazardous materials,” and was subject to an ongoing “environmental assessment.”
On July 13, 1994, the United States Army Corp of Engineers (COE), in cooperation with the DPG, notified the Cannons that the Government was conducting a “geophysical survey of property known as the Yellow Jacket Mines.” The purpose of the survey was “to determine whether ... these lands have been impacted by unexploded ordnance.” The letter provided a contact if the Cannons “wish[ed] to discuss the project in greater detail.” Margaret Louise and Allan Robert Cannon signed access agreements on July 22 and August 28, respectively.3 The agreements authorized the Government to inspect the Cannons’ property “under the remedial design phase of the Defense Environmental Restoration Program for Formerly Used Defense Sites” (FUDS) to “[d]etermine [the] presence or absence of Ordnance and Explosive Wastes (OEW) contamination.”4
On August 23, 1994, the COE issued a press release announcing “an informal Availability Session” to be held the follow*1187ing week on August 30,1994, at the Tooele County Courthouse. The release stated the COE was undertaking an “Engineering Evaluation/Cost Analysis (EE/CA)” to determine risks associated with former defense sites including the Yellow Jacket Area.5 The release explained that testing in and around the area during the 1940s involved “toxic, smoke, and flame agents in bombs, mortar and artillery shells, rockets, and ... light case tanks. Gasoline, butane, the non-persistent agents Phosgene, Hydrogen Cyanide, and Cyanogen Chloride, and the persistent agent Mustard Gas were used in the tests.” The release further explained that once testing ended, “the cleanup process involved a sweep of the areas to clear remaining surface ordnance.” The release specifically noted the possibility that “some soil contamination and subsurface OEW may still exist.”
Margaret Louise Cannon attended the public “Session” and obtained three “Fact Sheets.” One of those sheets, entitled ‘Yellow Jacket Ranges,” reiterated much of the information contained in the press release. A portion of the fact sheet labeled “Potential Hazards” read:
A study by the [COE] in 1993 ... reported that it is highly probable that these mine areas are contaminated with hazardous ordnance and explosive waste (OEW)- It is suspected that there is subsurface OEW throughout the area which may come to the surface through erosion, frost heaving, intrusive work such as digging, or recreational land use. Additionally, rounds that may have fallen short or long of intended targets could also present public hazards.
In the fall of 1994, the COE conducted numerous interviews with community members to assess the public’s level of concern and informational needs regarding the EE/CA project. On December 6,1994, Margaret Louise Cannon participated in a telephone interview. The interviewer’s contemporaneous notes indicate Margaret Louise obtained knowledge about the Government’s weapons testing program in the Yellow Jacket Area from her father Dr. J. Floyd Cannon. According to the notes, Dr. Cannon asked DPG four to six times to clean up its mess and was “treated horribly.” Dr. Cannon witnessed unexploded ordnance “all over” the property and was “livid over” the Army’s testing. During the interview, Margaret Louise reportedly expressed much distrust towards the Government and its apparent willingness to address the problem. She stated private land owners affected by the testing were “probably going to have to hire an attorney.”
In August 1996, the Government released an EE/CA draft report documenting the survey results. United States Army Corps of Engineers Engineering and Support Center, Draft: Formerly Used Defense Site Engineering Evaluation/Cost Analysis Report: Yellow Jacket Ranges, Site No. J08UT109800, Tooele County, Utah (1996). The draft report indicated the Cannons’ property was in fact highly contaminated with ordnance. A limited search of the property based on “search grids” revealed “subsurface geophysical anomalies.”6 The report stated “[n]o assumption can be made as to what percentage of subsurface geophysical *1188anomalies are actually CWM [chemical weapons], UXO, or UXO related items.” The limited search also revealed “a number of UXO and UXO-related items ... on the ground surface.”7 The report concluded:
The density of the geophysical anomalies and ordnance-related debris, the presence of UXO and UXO-related items on the surface, and the presence of multiple spent ordnance items imply that a relatively higher hazard exists due to UXO/ CWM contamination at the Yellow Jacket Mines than at the other investigation areas.
Due to cost concerns, the EE/CA draft report rejected a proposed clean-up of the site. The report estimated “Full-Scale Removal” of munitions and related debris in the Yellow Jacket Area would cost approximately $12.3 million. The report recommended an alternative plan which included (1) acquisition of private mine claims and property titles; (2) fencing and posting signs; (3) limited removal action; and (4) mine sealing. To date, the only action the Government has taken associated with the draft report’s conclusions and recommendations is to defend this lawsuit. In fact, “due to funding constraints,” the Government has yet to issue a final version of the EE/CA Report.8
II.
On April 7, 1998, Plaintiffs Margaret Louise and Allan Robert Cannon presented the Army a damage claim for injury to their respective mining interests. On December 11, 1998, the Cannons filed this lawsuit under the FTCA asking for “not less than $8 million.” Shortly thereafter, the Army summarily denied the Cannons’ administrative claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 2675(a).9 The Government submitted a motion to dismiss the Cannons’ suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). The Government based its motion on, among other things, the FTCA’s two-year statute of limitations, 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b), and the doctrine of sovereign immunity.10 The Cannons argued the discovery rule tolled the limita*1189tions period until August 1996 when the EE/CA draft report issued. Because the Cannons filed their administrative claim in April 1998, their suit ostensibly was timely.
After hearing, the district court denied the Government’s motion to dismiss. Apparently rejecting application of the discovery rule, the court summarily concluded the contamination from the Army’s weapons testing constituted a “continuing trespass and nuisance” on the Cannons’ mining interests. The court made no underlying factual findings to support its legal conclusion. Following a bench trial and entry of judgment for the Cannons, the Government appealed.11 We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review de novo the district court’s legal conclusion. See Dahl v. United States, 319 F.3d 1226, 1228-29 (10th Cir.2003).
On appeal, the Government contends the two-year limitations period began to run no later than August 30, 1994, the date on which Margaret Louise Cannon attended the “Public Availability Session” and obtained a fact sheet indicating a high probability the Cannon property was contaminated with hazardous ordnance and explosive waste. The Cannons counter with the proposition that the discovery rule tolled the limitations period until August 1996 when the Government released the EE/CA draft report. According to the Cannons, “[tjheir claim did not accrue until release of the Government’s 1996 EE/CA report, which finally and conclusively determined the Cannon property had been severely contaminated by U.S. Army weapons tests.” In the alternative, the Cannons adopt the district court’s rationale. They assert the Government’s contamination constitutes a continuing trespass and nuisance on their property. Under this theory, the Cannons argue their FTCA claim continues to accrue until the Government ceases its tortious conduct by decontaminating their property.
III.
An FTCA claim against the Federal Government must be “presented in writing to the appropriate Federal agency within two years after such claim accrues.”12 Federal law governs the point at which a claim accrues under the FTCA. Hoery v. United States, 324 F.3d 1220, 1222 (10th Cir.2003). Neither the FTCA nor its legislative history, however, speaks to when a “claim accrues.” In making that determination, we keep “in mind that the Act waives the immunity of the United States and that in construing the statute of limitations, which is a condition of that *1190waiver, we should not take it upon ourselves to extend the waiver beyond that which Congress intended.” United States v. Kubrick, 444 U.S. 111, 117-18, 100 S.Ct. 352, 62 L.Ed.2d 259 (1979). Nor should we seek to narrow that waiver. Rather, we seek to interpret § 2401(b) consistent with congressional intent.
A.
In the Tenth Circuit, the general rule for accrual of an FTCA claim outside the medical malpractice context is the “injury-occurrence rule.” An FTCA tort claim accrues on the date of the injury’s occurrence. Plaza Speedway Inc. v. United States, 311 F.3d 1262, 1267-68 (10th Cir.2002). A different rule, the discovery rule, applies only in the “exceptional case” where a reasonably diligent plaintiff could not immediately know of the injury and its cause. Id. at 1268. In that instance, an FTCA claim accrues at the time when a reasonably diligent plaintiff would have known of the injury and its cause. Id. at 1267. For FTCA purposes, “[a] claimant is aware of the injury once ... apprised of the general nature of the injury. Lack of knowledge of the injury’s permanence, extent, and ramifications does not toll the statute.” Gustavson v. United States, 655 F.2d 1034, 1036 (10th Cir.1981) (medical malpractice claim); see also Robbins v. United States, 624 F.2d 971, 973 (10th Cir.1980) (uncertainty as to the “ultimate damage” does not toll § 2401(b)). In Dahl, 319 F.3d at 1229, we recently explained—
the discovery rule should be applied only when the injury is “unknowable by its very essence, i.e., its existence at the critical moment simply cannot be ascertained. The fact that a plaintiff happens to be ignorant of a potential claim, whether because the plaintiff was not diligent in monitoring its land or because observing the taking would exact a hardship on plaintiff in terms of money, manpower, time and effort, is not enough to” justify application of the discovery rule.
(quoting Catellus Dev. Corp. v. United States, 31 Fed. Cl. 399, 407 (1994)) (internal citations and brackets omitted).
After Dahl, the Government’s argument that this is not an “exceptional case” calling for application of the discovery rule is forceful.13 Any suggestion that the nature of the Cannons’ injury or its cause at the outset was “unknowable by its very essence,” seems doubtful.14 But we need not *1191apply the “injury-occurrence rule” to resolve this case. Our decision in Plaza Speedway, 311 F.3d at 1262, compels us to conclude that the discovery rule, even if applicable, did not toll the two-year limitations period beyond the date of the “Availability Session” in August 1994.
In Plaza Speedway, we applied the discovery rule to an FTCA toxic tort claim. From 1960 through 1984, the Army, on property adjacent to the subject property, trained firefighters by pouring flammable liquids into a shallow fire pit, igniting the liquids, and extinguishing the flames. When claimants purchased the adjacent property in February 1989, they “were aware that the United States Army had conducted numerous operations at [the airfield] in a close proximity to [the] area whereby jet fuel, solvents and various chemicals were employed in a number of exercise activities over the years.” Id. at 1265. Nonetheless, the new owners did not seek an environmental assessment of their property. In August 1993, an environmental geologist with the State of Kansas phoned the owners to discuss chemical contamination on their property. The geologist followed up with an October 1993 letter informing the owners of hazardous substances on their property. In February 1995, the owners received formal notice from the State that the Army’s nearby military operations could be the source of the contamination. The owners filed an administrative claim with the Army for property contamination in October 1995.
We held the discovery rule tolled the running of the limitations period only until August 1993 when the State’s environmental geologist informally phoned the owners to discuss the contamination on their property. Because the owners knew at that time of the Army’s prior use of chemical substances on the adjacent property, they had adequate knowledge of their injury and its cause to warrant further investigation. Thus, the owners’ October 1995 administrative claim was untimely. Section 2401(b) and the doctrine of sovereign immunity prohibited the district court from exercising jurisdiction over the matter. Id. at 1270-71.
We reach a similar conclusion in this case. In a December 1994 government interview, Margaret Louise Cannon acknowledged she learned of the weapons testing on the property from her father, Dr. J. Floyd Cannon, who died in 1980. She indicated her father witnessed unexploded ordnance “all over” the property and “was livid” over the testing. She further indicated Dr. Cannon repeatedly asked the DPG to clean up the property. See supra at 1187. In July 1994, the Army sent the Cannons a letter of concern regarding ordnance contamination on their property. In August 1994, the Army held a public gathering which further informed the Cannons about possible ordnance contamination on their property and the ongoing environmental assessment. One of the fact sheets which Margaret Louise Cannon procured at the gathering “reported that it is highly probable that these mine areas are contaminated with hazardous ordnance and explosive waste.” She acknowledged the Cannons’ likely need for an attorney to address the situation during her December 1994 interview. See supra at 1186-1187.15
*1192The Cannons certainly were not “ignorant of a potential claim” against the Government in August 1994. Dahl, 319 F.3d at 1229. At that point (if not before), the Cannons possessed adequate information about their injury and its cause to commence running of the limitations period. Yet they failed to seek counsel or initiate any investigation into the matter. Rather, the Cannons waited until the Government informed them of the extent of their injury to file an administrative claim, and now assert they were unaware of “long-term” damage to their property prior to release of the EE/CA draft report.
Notably, much of the damage which the Government’s study detected was surface damage due to unexploded ordnance. See supra n. 7. A surface investigation of their mining property would have revealed the likely extent of the Cannons’ property damage long before the Government’s study did. As we stated over two decades ago in Gustavson, 655 F.2d at 1036, and now reaffirm: “Lack of knowledge of the injury’s permanence, extent, and ramifications does not toll [§ 2401(b)].”
The Supreme Court’s decision in Kubrick, 444 U.S. at 111, 100 S.Ct. 352, further supports our conclusion. In that FTCA malpractice case, the Court rejected the proposition that once aware of an injury and its cause, a plaintiff “need not initiate a prompt inquiry and would be free to sue any time within two years from the time he receives or perhaps forms for himself a reasonable opinion that he has been wronged.” Id. at 118, 100 S.Ct. 352. The Cannons, armed with notice of their injury and its cause, could have protected themselves months if not years before release of the EE/CA draft report. Under the undisputed facts of this case, the Cannons undoubtedly had notice of the general nature of their injury and its cause no later than August 1994. Hence, we refuse to postpone accrual of their FTCA claim until the Government informed them as to the extent of their damage in August 1996. Binding precedent will not permit us to “undermine the purpose of the limitations statute, which is to require the reasonably diligent presentation of tort claims against the Government.” Id. at 123, 100 S.Ct. 352.
B.
The Cannons seek to avoid the effect of § 2401(b) and case law construing it by characterizing the Government’s tortious conduct in this case as continuous. As we recently explained: “For continuing torts, ... [an FTCA] claim continues to accrue as long as the tortious conduct continues, although the plaintiffs recovery is limited by the statute of limitations to the two-year period dating back from when the plaintiffs complaint was filed.” Hoery, 324 F.3d at 1222. Under their continuing tort theory, the Cannons contend the presence of the Government’s unexploded ordnance and chemical contamination on their mining interests constitutes ongoing tortious misconduct which accrues repeatedly.
Under the FTCA, the Government is liable “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances,” 28 U.S.C. § 2674, and “in accordance with the law of the place where the act ... occurred.” Id. § 1346(b)(1). Because the FTCA mandates application of state law to resolve questions of substantive liability, the question of whether a tort is characterized as permanent or continuous depends upon how state law would characterize the tort. Hoery, 324 F.3d at 1222.16 Because the *1193Cannons’ property is located in Utah, we look to Utah state law to characterize the nature of the tort in this case. Compare infra n. 18.
To determine whether a trespass or nuisance is permanent or continuous, Utah state courts “look solely to the act constituting the trespass [or nuisance], and not to the harm resulting from the act.” Breiggar Prop., L.C., v. H.E. Davis & Sons, 52 P.3d 1133, 1135 (Utah 2002) (emphasis in original) (clarifying Walker Drug Co., Inc. v. La Sal Oil Co., 902 P.2d 1229 (Utah 1995) (Walker I)). In Breiggar, a landowner sued a state transportation department contractor for trespass after the contractor left debris on his property. The Utah Supreme Court characterized the tort as permanent, and concluded the limitations period began to run on the date the contractor dumped the debris on the property. The court viewed as irrelevant “[t]he fact that the pile of debris continued to remain on Breiggar’s property.” Id. at 1136. “Whether the trespass or nuisance is continuous or permanent is a different question from whether the resulting injury to the land or to the possessor’s interests in the land is temporary or permanent.” Walker Drug Co., Inc. v. La Sal Oil Co., 972 P.2d 1238, 1246 n. 9 (Utah 1998) (Walker II). Under Utah law, a continuous tort requires “recurring tortious ... conduct and is not established by the continuation of harm caused by previous but terminated tortious ... conduct.” Breig-gar, 52 P.3d at 1136 (emphasis in original) (internal quotations omitted).
In this case, the Army discontinued its conduct, ie., dropping ordnance, on the Cannons’ property in 1945, leaving a “debris field” of exploded and unexploded ordnance and chemical contamination on and under the surface. The harm for which the Cannons now seek to recover damages is the exact same harm which their grandfather, Jesse F. Cannon, incurred in 1945 and which their father, Dr. J. Floyd Cannon, “inherited” in 1954. Despite the Cannons’ contrary assertion, the fact that dangerous ordnance and contamination remain on the Cannons’ property is irrelevant in characterizing the nature of the Government’s tort under Utah law. The harm that existed in 1945 is the harm that exists now. The Cannons do not suggest and nothing in the record supports the proposition that contamination or ordnance continues to enter or migrate onto the Cannons’ property. Compare Hoery, 324 F.3d at 1221 (recognizing allegation that chemical contamination continued to migrate onto plaintiffs property and enter groundwater and soil).17 The Government’s failure *1194to remove ordnance and contamination from the Cannons’ property does not constitute a continuing trespass or nuisance under Utah law.18 Accordingly, a continuing trespass or nuisance theory provides the Cannons no relief from § 2401(b)’s two-year limitations period.
IV.
The result the law dictates in this case does not diminish the harm to the Cannons’ property which has persisted over half a century. Courts generally “should regard the plea of limitations as a meritorious defense, in itself serving a public interest.” Kubrick, 444 U.S. at 117, 100 S.Ct. 352 (internal quotations omitted). Nevertheless, “[e]very statute of limitations ... may permit a rogue to escape.” Toussie v. United States, 397 U.S. 112, 123, 90 S.Ct. 858, 25 L.Ed.2d 156 (1970) (internal quotations omitted). Prior to testing, the United States expressly promised the Cannons’ grandfather that it would “leave the property of the owner in as good condition as it is on the date of the government’s entry.” Fifty-eight years later, the Government has yet to fulfill its contractual obligation to the Cannon family. They are still waiting.19
The United States Government has yet fully to recognize and appreciate Jesse F. Cannon’s contribution to National Security during World War II. The Government should have lived up to its obligations long ago. Unfortunately, applicable law rendered the district court powerless to grant the Cannons the monetary relief to which they undoubtedly are entitled absent decontamination. The Cannons’ remedy at this stage is political, however, not legal.20
REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions to dismiss this action for want of subject matter jurisdiction.