The Rock Shelf Snap
Leander is built on thin topsoil over solid limestone bedrock. We call it the "rock shelf."
This makes digging graves difficult, and it destroys foundations. Often, a monument sits half on deep clay and half on the solid rock shelf. When the clay shrinks in the summer, that side drops. The rock side stays put. The concrete footer snaps in half. The monument tips over.
You can't just shove dirt under the low side. The clay will move again. For permanent tombstone repair and restoration, we have to pin the foundation. We drill into the solid bedrock and anchor the footer. This stops the clay from pushing the stone around.
Cedar Resin (Yellow Glue)
We are deep in Hill Country. The cemeteries are full of Ashe Juniper (Cedar) trees.
In the winter, they dump massive clouds of yellow pollen. This isn't dry dust. It is oily. It lands on the headstones and melts into a sticky, yellow resin. It acts like glue. Dirt sticks to it and turns black. Standard soap won't cut this oil.
We use a strong surfactant. We break down the tree oil chemically. We lift the resin out of the stone pores so we can rinse it away. If you don't strip the oil, the stain stays.
Quarry Dust Haze
Leander is quarry country. The air carries fine white limestone dust from the crushers.
This dust settles on the markers every day. Morning dew turns it into a wet paste. Then the sun bakes it hard. It bonds to the polished granite face. You cannot wipe this off with a dry cloth. It acts like grinding compound. It dulls the mirror finish immediately.
We use a high-flow water flush for grave site cleaning services. We float the grit off the stone. We remove the haze without grinding the dust into the polish.
Fire Ant Acid Burn
Fire ants love the thermal mass of the stones. They build mounds right against the base.
The soil in these mounds is acidic. It sits against the polish and etches it. It leaves a dull, rough ring around the bottom of the marker. You can't wash that ring off; the finish is gone. We treat the ground to move the ants out. Then we use alkaline cleaners for cleaning stone gravestones. We neutralize the acid to stop it from eating deeper.
Hard Water Scale
The water here comes from the limestone aquifer. It is very hard.
Cemeteries irrigate to keep the grass alive. The sun bakes the water off, but the calcium stays. It builds a thick, white scale on the base of the monument. It bonds to the granite. Scrapers scratch the stone. We use a buffered acid wash. It attacks the calcium bond. We melt the minerals back into liquid form and flush them away.