Cinch Roofing

Cinch Roofing Cinch Roofing is your Owens Corning Preferred Roofing Contractor for Sugarland, Katy, Richmond, Houston and surrounding areas in Harris County, Texas!

Cinch Roofing is based in Sugar Land, Texas offering quality, professional-grade services throughout Sugar Land, Cinco Ranch, Fulshear, Greatwood, Katy, Pecan Grove, and Richmond, TX. Cinch Roofing is an Owens Corning Preferred Contractor! Enjoy the peace of mind that comes with getting service from a partner of one of the most recognized and trusted names in roofing and home building! If you are

in need of reputable roofing repairs or new roof construction, make Cinch Roofing your first call! Need references? We've worked hard to lock down our "Business in Good Standing" rating with the Better Business Bureau! Contact Cinch Roofing for Residential and Commercial services such as:

Roof Repair
Roof Replacement
Shingle Roofs
Tile Roofs
Metal Roofing
Laminate Roofs
Composition Roofing
Flat Roof Repair
PVC Roofing
EPDM Roofing
TPO Roofing
Roof Coatings

Call Cinch Roofing TODAY or visit our new website: We have answers to all of your questions!

This Memorial Day, honor your home with the care it deserves. At Cinch Roofing, we've been protecting homes in the Houst...
05/25/2026

This Memorial Day, honor your home with the care it deserves. At Cinch Roofing, we've been protecting homes in the Houston and Sugar Land area since 1983 with roofing systems built to last.

As certified Master Elite installers, we offer extended warranties that most contractors simply cannot provide.

Don't be caught off guard by unexpected water damage or costly repairs. Many homeowners assume their roofs are fine just because they look good from the ground.

However, serious issues can lurk beneath the surface that only trained professionals can detect.

Start with a FREE No Obligation Roof Inspection today and ensure your home is ready for any weather.

05/25/2026

June isn't late. For heat-loving crops, it's exactly the right window. Soil is warm, growth is fast, and most of these finish before frost with room to spare. 🌿

Every crop on this list goes directly into the ground now β€” no indoor starts, no transplants. Seed to harvest, timed for summer.

BUSH BEANS β€” 55 days, Zones 3-10:
Sow every three weeks through July for continuous pods into September. June-sown beans germinate in warm soil within five to seven days and produce faster than early plantings that sat cold and stalled. One of the most reliable crops to direct-sow through midsummer

CUCUMBER β€” 58 days, Zones 4-11:
June cucumbers avoid the cucumber beetle wave that damages or kills May transplants. The beetle pressure peaks early; by the time June-sown plants are large enough to matter, that pressure has reduced. Quick-growing vines that hit productive stride in August when summer harvests are most needed

SUMMER SQUASH β€” 50 days, Zones 3-10:
The fastest fruit producer from seed on this list. June sowing means August harvest with fewer squash vine borer problems than May plantings face β€” borers peak in early summer and the population tapers before June plants have thick enough stems to be a target. Pick every two to three days at this heat to keep the plant producing

OKRA β€” 55 days, Zones 5-11:
Needs warm soil to germinate reliably. June is actually better than May in most zones because the soil is hot enough for fast, even germination. Produce production increases as temperatures climb β€” the opposite of most crops

YARDLONG BEAN β€” 60 days, Zones 7-11:
A heat-loving climber from the cowpea family that barely grows when temperatures are below 75Β°F. June is when it finally wakes up and performs. Provide a trellis β€” these vines reach 8 to 10 feet

SUNFLOWER β€” 70 days, Zones 3-10:
June sowing means late August bloom β€” extending color and bird-feeding deep into fall. The late bloom also catches the migrating monarch and hummingbird windows in many regions. Tall branching varieties like Lemon Queen produce multiple blooms per plant and are more valuable for pollinators than single-stalk types

BASIL β€” 30 days to first harvest, Zones 4-11:
Direct-sow into warm soil now. June basil germinates faster than April indoor starts in cold trays. Pinch the growing tip above the third set of leaves to encourage branching β€” a pinched plant produces more than a leggy unpinched one for the rest of the season

DILL β€” 40 days to harvest, Zones 3-11:
Sow now for midsummer harvest. Succession sow every three weeks because it bolts fast in heat. The flower umbels that follow are valuable for beneficial insects and for pickling β€” leaving it to bolt is not necessarily a waste

MALABAR SPINACH β€” 55 days, Zones 7-11:
The heat-proof spinach substitute. Won't germinate until soil reaches 65Β°F β€” which is why May planting often fails and June planting works. A fleshy climbing vine that produces leaves continuously through summer heat when true spinach has been compost for months 🌱

June-sown crops miss early pests, skip the cold-soil stall, and finish before frost. The second wave often outproduces the first.

05/25/2026

The bag of soil you grab at the garden center matters more than most people think β€” because "soil" and "potting mix" and "seed starting mix" aren't the same thing, and using the wrong one in the wrong place causes most early-season failures.

🌿 Four mixes and where each one belongs:

- Seed starting mix β€” for germinating tomatoes, peppers, basil, and anything from seed indoors. It's sterile, ultra-light, and holds almost no nutrients on purpose. Tiny roots push through it easily, and the lack of organic matter prevents the fungal problems that kill seedlings in their first week. Don't fertilize until the first true leaves appear β€” the seed carries enough energy to get that far on its own

- Potting mix β€” for containers, window boxes, and indoor plants. The blend of peat or coir with perlite holds moisture while still draining. Regular soil in a pot compacts into a dense block after a few waterings β€” potting mix stays open. Replace it every couple of years as the organic matter breaks down and loses its structure

- Raised bed mix β€” for vegetables grown in raised frames. Heavier than potting mix, with compost, aged manure, and sometimes wood fines. Raised beds drain fast from the sides, so the mix needs enough body to hold water and nutrients instead of letting them wash through

- Topsoil β€” for filling in-ground planting holes, grading lawns, and blending with native soil. It's heavy mineral dirt. Putting it in a container or raised bed creates a dense, waterlogged layer that roots can't move through. It belongs in the ground, not above it

🌱 The one mistake that causes the most damage:

- Grabbing a bag of topsoil for a container because it's cheaper. The price difference between topsoil and potting mix is a few dollars. The difference in how your plant grows is the entire season. The drainage, the aeration, and the root space are built into the mix β€” or they're not

Each growing environment needs the mix that was blended for it. The seed tray, the pot, the raised bed, and the ground are four different environments β€” and the bag that works in one fails in another 🌿

As we reflect on the sacrifices of our heroes this Memorial Day, let's also prioritize the security of our homes. At Cin...
05/25/2026

As we reflect on the sacrifices of our heroes this Memorial Day, let's also prioritize the security of our homes.

At Cinch Roofing, we are committed to providing peace of mind with roofing systems that stand the test of timeRegular roof inspections are essential for maintaining the integrity and value of your home.

Many assume their roofs are fine until unexpected problems arise. Our detailed inspections can save you from costly repairs down the line.

πŸ› οΈ **Get Your FREE No Obligation Roof Inspection Today!**

05/25/2026

Rosemary salt is an easy way to turn your freshly harvested rosemary into a small jar full of flavor and aroma that highlights any dish.

05/25/2026

June isn't late. It's the second planting window β€” and for heat-loving crops, it's the RIGHT window.
Everything on this list goes directly into warm soil now and produces before the season ends. No indoor starts. No transplants. Seed to harvest, timed for summer.

- Bush Beans β€” 55 days. Sow every 3 weeks through July for continuous pods into September.

- Cucumber β€” 58 days. June-sown cucumbers avoid the early-season cucumber beetle wave that kills May transplants.

- Summer Squash β€” 50 days. The fastest fruit producer from seed. June sowing means August harvest with fewer vine borer problems than May plantings.

- Okra β€” 55 days. Needs hot soil to germinate. June is better than May in most zones. Produces harder as temperatures climb.

- Yardlong Bean β€” 60 days. Heat-loving climber that barely grows below 75Β°F. June is when it finally wakes up.

- Sunflower β€” 70 days. June sowing means late August bloom β€” extending the garden's color and bird-feeding season into fall.

- Basil β€” 30 days to first harvest. Direct-sow now into warm soil. Germinates faster than April indoor starts did.

- Dill β€” 40 days to harvest, 70 to seed. Sow now for midsummer harvest. Succession sow every 3 weeks because it bolts fast.

- Malabar Spinach β€” 55 days. The heat-proof spinach substitute. Won't germinate until soil hits 65Β°F. June is its month.

June-sown crops miss the early pests, skip the cold-soil stall, and finish before frost. The second wave often outperforms the first.

05/25/2026

Some garden advice gets repeated so often it stops being questioned. These five sound right β€” and aren't. 🌿

MYTH 1 β€” GRAVEL IN THE BOTTOM OF POTS IMPROVES DRAINAGE:
What actually happens: adding a gravel layer creates a perched water table. Water doesn't move from a finer medium (potting mix) into a coarser one (gravel) until the finer zone is fully saturated β€” so the gravel layer raises the wet zone directly into the root area, not below it. A continuous mix of potting soil with perlite mixed throughout drains better than any layered pot. The fix is simple: drill more holes in the bottom and use perlite throughout the mix, not gravel underneath.

MYTH 2 β€” WATERING IN MIDDAY SUN BURNS LEAVES:
Water droplets on smooth leaves don't focus enough light to scorch plant tissue β€” this has been tested in controlled conditions and the burn simply doesn't happen at realistic droplet sizes on most plant surfaces. There are good reasons to water in the morning: less water is lost to evaporation, and foliage dries before evening when fungal infection risk is highest. Water early for those reasons β€” not because of a sunburn effect that doesn't actually occur. Exception: some waxy or hairy-surfaced leaves in certain succulents and ferns may respond differently.

MYTH 3 β€” EGGSHELLS ADD CALCIUM QUICKLY:
Eggshells are among the slowest-decomposing materials in garden soil. Coarse pieces tossed into beds sit there largely unchanged for two to five or more years before releasing anything plants can use. If you want eggshells to contribute calcium in one season, grind them to a fine powder. If you need rapid calcium availability β€” for blossom end rot or other acute deficiencies β€” gypsum or lime with a soil test is far faster. The main functional value of eggshells is as a physical slug barrier at the soil surface, not as a nutrient source.

MYTH 4 β€” USED COFFEE GROUNDS ACIDIFY SOIL:
Brewing extracts most of the acid from the grounds. Used grounds test close to neutral pH. They won't lower soil pH for blueberries, azaleas, or rhododendrons the way most gardeners assume. They are useful as a nitrogen source in compost. Don't spread them thick on the soil surface β€” they form a dense hydrophobic crust that repels water. Mix them into compost or work them into the soil instead of using them as mulch.

MYTH 5 β€” MARIGOLDS REPEL MOST GARDEN PESTS:
French marigold (Tagetes patula) roots release alpha-terthienyl, a compound that suppresses specific plant-parasitic nematodes in the soil. That is real and documented β€” but it's underground, it's nematode-specific, and the effect requires growing marigolds as a cover crop and tilling them into the soil at the end of the season for maximum impact. Marigolds don't repel aphids, beetles, caterpillars, or the vast majority of above-ground pests. The visual presence of marigolds among tomatoes is not a pest deterrent for anything except those specific soil nematodes. French and Mexican marigolds (T. patula and T. minuta) have the nematode-suppressing effect; African marigold (T. erecta) is much less effective 🌱

Five corrections. Same garden. Better decisions.

This Memorial Day, as we honor the brave men and women who have served our country, let's also take a moment to ensure o...
05/25/2026

This Memorial Day, as we honor the brave men and women who have served our country, let's also take a moment to ensure our homes are protected. At Cinch Roofing, we understand the importance of a safe and secure home for your family.

Don't wait for unexpected water damage or costly repairs. Take advantage of our FREE No Obligation Roof Inspection today!

Nobody talks about how hard this part is… Thinking your roof is fine just because it looks okay from below. πŸ€”Here’s the ...
05/25/2026

Nobody talks about how hard this part is…

Thinking your roof is fine just because it looks okay from below. πŸ€”

Here’s the truth:

β€’ What you don’t see CAN hurt you! 😱
β€’ That one friend who thinks they’re a roof expert πŸ˜…
β€’ Too real not to share πŸ”₯

Regular roof inspections uncover hidden problems before they become costly disasters.

Agree or disagree? Drop it in the comments! πŸ’¬

A few weeks ago, I thought my roof was rock solid. Little did I know, it was hiding issues that could’ve cost me a fortu...
05/25/2026

A few weeks ago, I thought my roof was rock solid. Little did I know, it was hiding issues that could’ve cost me a fortune. 😱

I had no clue until Cinch Roofing came into the picture. Their FREE inspection? Total lifesaver.

βœ… Pinpointed problems I couldn’t see from the ground.
βœ… Gave me a clear, honest estimate with no BS.
βœ… Offered expert advice that saved me from future headaches.

Now, I sleep easy knowing my home’s protected. If you’re in Houston or Sugar Land, don’t wait for a leak to find out your roof’s in trouble.

Address

19901 Southwest Freeway
Sugar Land, TX
77479

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 7pm
Tuesday 7am - 7pm
Wednesday 7am - 7pm
Thursday 7am - 7pm
Friday 7am - 7pm
Saturday 7am - 7pm
Sunday 7am - 7pm

Telephone

+18325984245

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