Caliche Concrete
The ground here is Caliche. It’s nasty. Wet, it’s glue. Dry, it’s concrete.
Rain kicks this mud up onto the base. It bakes on hard. If you try to scrape it, you scratch the polish. We use chemical breakers. They soften the mud so we can hose it off without touching the stone with a blade.
Cedar Pollen Paste
Mountain Cedars coat everything in yellow dust.
Dew mixes with the pollen. It turns into paste. It sticks to the stone and feeds black mold. If you leave it, it stains deep. We use grave site cleaning services to strip this layer before it bonds permanently.
Flash Flood Scouring
Killeen sits on a limestone shelf. The dirt is thin.
Storms here are violent. Water runs fast over the bedrock. It scours the soil right out from under the monument. The base loses support and slides. Adding dirt is a waste. For permanent tombstone repair and restoration, we install gravel friction piles. We lock the foundation directly to the rock.
White Stone Staining
We maintain a lot of white marble military markers. They are sponges.
Hard water leaves orange rust spots. Cut grass leaves green stains. Bleach destroys marble—it turns it yellow. We use biological cleaners for cleaning stone gravestones. We pull the stains out without burning the stone surface.
Live Oak Tannins
Live Oak leaves are tough. They get stuck in the grass and rot.
They leak tannin acid into the stone. This creates dark brown stains. It looks like rust, but it's organic. We use alkaline pastes. They neutralize the acid and lift the brown discoloration.