Cleaning Pine Sap and Lifting Sinking Markers in Merrimack
Merrimack is built along the river, but it is defined by its trees. The huge White Pines at Last Rest and Turkey Hill block out the sun. The ground never really dries out. That constant shade creates thick, green moss on the stones. But the trees also drip sap.
That sticky resin hits the headstones and cures instantly. It turns into hard black beads that look like road tar. Down by the river in Reeds Ferry and Thornton's Ferry, we have a different problem: the ground is basically sand. It doesn't hold heavy objects well. We see flat lawn markers that have sunk three or four inches below the grass. Families searching for headstone cleaning services near me call us to dissolve that stubborn pine pitch, kill the moss, and dig their family markers out of the ground before they disappear completely.
Removing Baked-On Pine Pitch
Pine pitch acts like superglue. It bonds to the surface of the granite. You can't just chip it off. Metal blades are dangerous here because they will scratch the polished finish before they remove the sap.
We chemically melt the pitch. We apply a solvent that turns the hard resin back into a liquid. We wipe it up by hand. It takes patience to go spot by spot, but it gets the stone clean without ruining the shine.
Lifting Sunken Flat Markers
The sandy soil in Merrimack drains well, but it compresses easily. Flat markers sink. In Last Rest Cemetery, we find markers that have dropped so deep the sod has grown completely over them.
We locate the edges and cut the grass back. We pry the stone up out of the hole. We don't just put it back on the dirt. We pack the hole with crushed gravel. This gives the stone a solid base that won't settle. We reset the marker flush with the turf so the mowers can ride over it safely.
Killing Heavy Shade Moss
The trees block the sun, so the stones stay damp. Moss grows thick on the north side of the monuments. It eats into the rough edges of the stone.
We kill the growth first. You have to kill the root system or it just comes back. When the moss is dead and brown, it releases its grip. We brush it off. We get the green off without grinding down the stone surface.
Resetting Frost-Heaved Monuments
Even with sandy soil, the frost moves things. We see upright monuments leaning in Turkey Hill. The ground freezes, expands, and tips the base.
We fix the lean by fixing the foundation. We hoist the stone. We dig out the dirt. Dirt freezes and holds water. We fill the hole with crushed stone instead. Stone drains, so the frost can't lift it. We set the monument back down, and it sits level.
Service Costs in Merrimack
We have flat-rate pricing for Merrimack, Litchfield, and Bedford. We don't need to visit the cemetery to give you a price. Check our subscription builder to see the exact cost for your plot.
- Sap Removal: Dissolving sticky pine resin.
- Marker Lifting: Raising sunken flat stones.
- Moss Removal: Killing heavy shade growth.
- Leveling: Resetting frost-heaved monuments.



