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Here's why that matters. Moss isn't just ugly. It holds moisture against your shingles and works its way under them over time, which leads to premature deterioration and eventually leaks. The longer it sits, the more damage it does. A roof that looks like this one did is already working against you - and the gutters packed with moss debris weren't helping either.
We went through the whole roof section by section - full moss removal on both stories, followed by a treatment to slow regrowth and keep it from coming back as fast. Then we cleaned out the gutters while we were up there. When gutters are full of moss and debris like these were, water has nowhere to go and backs up against the roofline. Getting everything cleared out at once just makes sense.
The difference between before and after on a job like this is hard to overstate. The shingles look like shingles again. The gutters are flowing. And the treatment that's now on the roof means it's set up to stay in better shape going forward - not just clean for a week. That's the goal every time.
If your roof is starting to look anything like this one did, it's worth getting it handled before the moss works its way further into the shingles. The earlier you catch it, the less damage there is to deal with.