The Beaumont Sinkhole
Beaumont is swamp country. The water table sits just inches below the grass line.
The soil here creates suction. We call it "Gumbo." It grabs heavy granite markers and drags them down. We find flat markers buried six inches deep. Digging them up and adding a bag of dirt solves nothing. The mud just swallows the fresh dirt, too.
For permanent tombstone repair and restoration, we have to stop the stone from cutting into the soil. We lift the sunken monument. We install a composite stabilizer grid underneath the base. This grid locks into the mud and increases the load-bearing surface area. It prevents the clay from pulling the monument down again. The stone sits on top of the soil instead of slicing through it.
Refinery Haze
The Golden Triangle is full of refineries. You can smell the sulfur in the air.
This fallout settles on the gravestones 24/7. The humidity traps it against the stone. It turns into a greasy, gray haze that dulls the granite. Rain does nothing to move it; the oil in the fallout repels water. If that film sits there, the sulfur turns acidic. It burns right through the polish.
We handle this with an industrial neutralizer for cleaning stone gravestones. We apply a chemical degreaser to break the oil bond. Once the grease lifts, we rinse the sulfur away. Standard soap cannot cut through this industrial film.
Bio-Film (Black Algae)
The humidity here stays near 100%. The stone never dries out completely.
This creates "Bio-Film." It is a thick layer of black algae and bacteria. It roots into the pores of the stone. Clients look for headstone cleaning services near me and often ask for pressure washing. That is a mistake. High pressure forces the spores deeper into the pores. It creates a cycle where the mold grows back faster and darker. We use a quaternary ammonium biocide. It soaks into the rock and kills the root system. The algae dies, turns brown, and rinses off with low pressure.
Salt Crystallization (Spalling)
The ground is wet, so the stones act like sponges. They wick groundwater up from the bottom.
This water is salty. The sun bakes the water out, but the minerals stay trapped inside the stone. They crystallize. As the crystals grow, they create internal pressure. Eventually, the face of the stone shears off. We see this damage constantly at Magnolia Cemetery. We inspect for this "spalling." We keep the stone breathable. Sealing these stones traps the salt and accelerates the explosion of the rock face.
Insect Acid Damage
We fight a constant battle against wasps, spiders, and mosquitoes.
They leave droppings on the markers. These black and brown specks are highly acidic. On a polished stone, they burn dull spots into the finish. On marble, they eat small holes in the surface. You cannot scrub these off; the acid has already etched the stone. We use enzyme cleaners for grave site cleaning services. The enzymes digest the organic waste. This neutralizes the acid so we can wipe the surface clean without using abrasives.