I'm leaving on a trip and can't be there but I love that cemetery. I would love to live on the lane its on. It is what is left of a road that went past the cemetery at one time but the flooding cut the cemetery up. I have not gotten out in the field over the little creek to see if graves are on that side marked or not so I have no reference as to how big it might have been at one time. A road crossed in front of it, bypassed completely by roads, the only road left is the L shaped one that went to the chapel years after the roads were not in use any more. Lots of little footstones and broken bits of stones are in the cemetery when I saw it last. Be sure to bring something to handle snakes with. Copperheads ,and with the creek so close, cottonmouths will be there so you need something handy to remove them if they are too close for comfort. This time of year they are sluggish and more dangerous. Skunks are on the roam right now also. I make up a sprayer of water mixed with orange oil and it makes them abandon the area. There were at least two skunk burrows there. They will leave if that is sprayed around, or stay hidden. Dawn Soap & water in a sprayer , used on an ant hill is a trick I learned from funeral directors and tombstone folks. They spritz the area with it before a funeral , it dries and the soap keeps the ants away for a day or so. That way they can continue the work in the cemetery without bug spray and other troubles for the people at a funeral. When I was webmaster for the Historic Texas Cemeteries website I collected some good ones. The best website I saw for clearing/cleaning/restoring a cemetery is this website. Maybe it will help. http://www.rootsweb.com/~inpcrp/repairtoolbox.html