Fixing Frost Heaves and Cleaning Road Film in Salem
Salem is a commuter town. The traffic never stops. In roadside cemeteries like Pine Grove, the headstones catch all that exhaust. It leaves a sticky black coating on the rock. This isn't normal dirt that washes off. It is an oily film that stains the granite and makes the inscriptions impossible to read.
The bigger problem is the ground. The frost line in Rockingham County goes deep. When the ground freezes, it moves. It lifts the foundations of heavy monuments and pushes them sideways. We see headstones tipping over and flat markers sinking into the mud when the ground thaws in April. Families searching for headstone cleaning services near me call us to strip off that traffic film, kill the crusty lichen, and reset the stones that the winter moved.
Resetting Leaning Monuments
A leaning headstone is a falling headstone waiting to happen. The frost pushes the ground up under one side of the base. When the ice melts, the stone doesn't settle back level. It tips.
We fix this by fixing the base. We hoist the monument up. We dig out the dirt that freezes and heaves. We fill the hole with crushed stone. Gravel drains the water away, so the ice can't form under the marker. We set the stone back down, and it stays straight.
Cleaning Traffic Soot
Stones near the road get covered in traffic film. It is petroleum-based dirt. It repels water. If you try to wash it with just water, it stays put.
We use an industrial cleaner to break down the grease. We apply it and let it emulsify the oil. Then we scrub. We have to work the brushes into the letters to flush the black grime out. When we rinse it, the natural color of the granite comes back.
Killing Granite Lichen
Lichen loves the rough granite in Mt. Pleasant. It grows in hard, round patches that look like grey cement. The roots dig into the pores of the rock. If you scrape it dry, you damage the stone.
We kill it with a biocide. We soak the growth until it turns soft. Once it is dead, it brushes right off. The stone comes clean, and the polish stays intact.
Lifting Sunken Flat Markers
The spring thaw turns the soil to mud. Heavy flat markers sink. The grass grows over the edges, and soon the marker is gone. We find markers buried under three inches of sod.
We find the edges and cut the grass back. We pry the stone up. We pack the hole with gravel to give it a solid footing. We reset the marker flush with the turf. It sits on a stable pad, so it won't sink back down.
Restoring "Sugary" Marble
The older sections of Salem have white marble stones that feel rough, like sandpaper. The rain has eaten away the smooth surface. These stones are fragile.
We clean them gently. We use a biological wash that removes the black mold but leaves the stone surface alone. We don't scrub these hard. We rely on the chemical to lift the dirt so we don't erode the stone any further.
Service Costs in Salem
We have flat-rate pricing for Salem, Windham, and Pelham. 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.
- Leveling: Resetting frost-heaved monuments.
- Degreasing: Cleaning road soot and film.
- Lichen Removal: Killing heavy biological growth.
- Marker Lifting: Raising sunken flat stones.