White Rock Escarpment Shift
Duncanville sits on the White Rock Escarpment. The ground here is treacherous—brittle chalk over shifting clay.
It snaps foundations clean in half. During droughts, the soil pulls away, leaving the concrete hanging. The stone tilts immediately.
For tombstone repair and restoration, we anchor the foundation deep into the solid chalk layer to stop the movement.
Crepe Myrtle "Black Tar"
Crepe Myrtles are everywhere here. They are infested with aphids.
These bugs drop sticky sap on the markers. It turns into black sooty mold instantly. It looks like someone poured tar on the stone. Regular soap won't touch this mess.
We use a specialized enzyme wash for grave site cleaning services. We digest the sap and wash the black mold away.
Cedar Pollen Paste
Cedar Hill is next door. In winter, the wind dumps yellow pollen on everything.
Rain turns this dust into a thick paste. It fills the engraved letters and dries like wood glue. It chokes out the inscription completely.
We use a surfactant flush for headstone cleaning services near me. We dissolve the pollen binder safely.
Liquid Limestone
Sprinklers here spray liquid limestone. The water is extremely hard.
When the water dries, the rock stays. It builds a thick white ring on the base that acts like cement. Chiseling it off chips the granite.
We use a buffered acid for cleaning stone gravestones. We dissolve the calcium bond chemically. The crust washes away.
Fire Ant Acid
Fire ants build mounds against the stones.
The dirt is acidic. It burns the polish, leaving a rough, dull ring. You cannot wash this damage off. We treat the ground and neutralize the acid to stop the burn.