Railroad Iron Fallout
Cleburne is a rail hub. Steel wheels grind on steel tracks all day.
This kicks up microscopic iron shards. They land on the stones. Morning dew rusts them instantly. The granite gets covered in tiny, stubborn orange spots. Soap does nothing. The rust is bonded to the stone.
We use a pH-neutral iron remover for grave site cleaning services. We melt the metal chemically to rinse it off.
Bedrock Slide
The soil here is thin. Limestone bedrock is often just inches down.
Heavy rain lubricates the rock layer. The topsoil turns into mud and slides downhill. The monuments "walk" with the dirt. They don't sink; they move sideways and tilt.
For tombstone repair and restoration, we drill into the solid rock. We anchor the foundation to the shelf so the stone stays put.
Cedar Resin
Red Cedars are thick in Johnson County. They drip sap constantly.
It hits the hot granite and bakes into a hard black resin. It holds dirt like epoxy. If you scrape it dry, you scratch the polish.
We use a solvent poultice for headstone cleaning services near me. We soften the resin to wipe it away without damage.
Liquid Limestone
Local water comes from limestone aquifers. It is extremely hard.
Sprinklers blast the bases with calcium-rich water. It dries and leaves a white crust. It bonds like concrete. Chipping it off takes chunks of granite with it.
We use a buffered acid for cleaning stone gravestones. We dissolve the calcium bond. The crust washes away.
Fire Ant Acid
Fire ants build mounds against the bases.
The dirt is acidic. It etches the polish. It leaves a rough, dull ring. You cannot wash this damage off. We treat the ground and neutralize the acid to stop the burn.