About this stone

Smooth 1 to 2 inch river stone with natural water worn beauty. Versatile enough for beds, borders, drainage, and decorative ground cover.

My experience with Mulch Mound was great and super easy. I ordered two yards of screened topsoil and was able to get it delivered within 2 days. They came in my requested time frame (afternoon) and dropped it off where I asked on my driveway. The topsoil was exactly what was a...

For most decorative and drainage applications in Hazleton, 2 to 3 inches of stone gives you the coverage and stability you need on the area's sandy loam base. Pathway and driveway edge applications benefit from 4 inches to account for frost heave during Hazleton's hard winters at elevation.
Use our free stone calculator

A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 10 feet by 10 feet at a few inches deep.

Hazleton Stone Delivery

Hazleton Stone Delivery

4.7
137 reviews
Regular price $127.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $127.00
Sale Sold out
Type
Size
Minimum of 3 yard
Hand-picked local yards
4,000+ regional deliveries
Dedicated support
Why order through Mulch Mound

The best local stone, without the guesswork.

We hand-pick and partner with the best yards in your region, keep only the ones our buyers rate well, and back each load with our guarantee.

Mulch Mound Guarantee

If your stone isn't the quantity or quality you ordered, we'll make it right.

About this stone

Smooth 1 to 2 inch river stone with natural water worn beauty. Versatile enough for beds, borders, drainage, and decorative ground cover.

My experience with Mulch Mound was great and super easy. I ordered two yards of screened topsoil and was able to get it delivered within 2 days. They came in my requested time frame (afternoon) and dropped it off where I asked on my driveway. The topsoil was exactly what was a...

For most decorative and drainage applications in Hazleton, 2 to 3 inches of stone gives you the coverage and stability you need on the area's sandy loam base. Pathway and driveway edge applications benefit from 4 inches to account for frost heave during Hazleton's hard winters at elevation.
Use our free stone calculator

A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 10 feet by 10 feet at a few inches deep.

View full details

How It Works

Getting started is easy — just follow these simple steps

1

Choose your stone

Make sure you adjust the quantity to your home's needs. You can use our calculator to estimate how much you'll need.

2

Select your delivery date

Select a delivery date you'd like for the product to be dropped off at your home

3

Sit back and wait

Sit back, wait, and let us work our magic to make sure the highest quality product is delivered to your driveway.

From The Mouths of Hazleton Folks

4.7
out of 5 based on 137 reviews
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Need Help Calculating How Much Stone & Gravel You Need?

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Measure the length and width of each area you plan to stone in feet and multiply them together to get square footage. Multiply that number by your intended depth in inches and divide by 324 to get cubic yards directly. In Hazleton, planning for at least 2 to 3 inches ensures your stone layer stays visually full and functional even after settling from the area's frequent and often heavy rainfall.

Stone Types We Deliver in Hazleton

When you need bulk stone by the yard in Hazleton, we make it simple with direct delivery to your driveway or job site. Whether you are reshaping a yard, improving drainage, or adding a decorative touch, our cubic yard orders are sized to fit residential and contractor projects across the area. Search for bulk gravel by the yard in Hazleton and you will find we keep it straightforward from order to drop.

1-2" River Stone

This smooth, rounded river rock brings a clean, natural look to landscapes throughout northeastern Pennsylvania. Its larger profile works well for dry creek beds, decorative ground cover around planting beds, and feature areas where a polished stone appearance is wanted. The size also allows good water flow, making it a practical choice in yards with heavier clay soils common to this part of the state.

Complete Your Outdoor Stone Project

Pairing stone with bulk topsoil from our inventory lets you regrade problem drainage areas before installing your stone layer, creating a lasting fix rather than a cosmetic cover on Hazleton properties with persistent water issues. Mulch borders alongside stone pathways and beds add softness and seasonal color to hardscape features while retaining moisture in adjacent planting areas through Hazleton's dry mid-summer stretches.

Map of Hazleton, Pennsylvania

Areas We Deliver Stone & Gravel in Hazleton, Pennsylvania

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Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Hazleton's freeze-thaw cycles are significant at nearly 1,900 feet, and stone installed without proper edge restraints or a compacted base will migrate noticeably over a single winter. Before spreading any decorative stone for a pathway or formal bed, tamp a 4 inch base of compacted crusher run into place first. That firm foundation gives the decorative stone above it a stable platform that resists the repeated expansion and contraction of Hazleton's cold-season ground movement.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

On sloped Hazleton lots, fine decorative gravel can travel downhill during heavy rain events and end up scattered across your lawn or into the street. Choosing angular crushed stone rather than smooth round pea gravel gives adjacent particles something to interlock with, dramatically reducing migration on grades. A small stone or timber check dam installed at the low end of a sloped stone bed also catches any material that does move during Hazleton's most intense summer storms.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Stone absorbs and radiates heat, which can work in your favor in Hazleton's variable climate. Light-colored stone placed near south-facing walls reflects warmth and can extend your growing season slightly past the average October 7 first frost by keeping that microclimate a few degrees warmer on clear fall nights. Dark stone absorbs more heat and can dry out adjacent sandy loam beds faster in summer, so pair dark decorative stone with a generous mulch layer on the planting bed side to compensate for the added moisture-pulling effect.

The Unique Landscape of Hazleton

Stone is one of the most practical materials you can bring to a Hazleton landscape because it solves real problems created by the area's climate and terrain. At 1,886 feet of elevation, Hazleton properties often sit on sloped lots where rainfall runs off quickly, cutting channels through sandy loam and undermining planting beds and pathways season after season. Decorative gravel and crushed stone placed in high-runoff zones intercepts that water and disperses it without eroding the soil beneath. Hazleton's 50 inches of annual rainfall also makes any low-maintenance groundcover that requires no mowing or irrigation extremely appealing, and stone pathways and borders deliver exactly that year after year. With a growing season bracketed tightly between May 10 and October 7, stone features add structure and visual interest to the landscape during the long months when plants are dormant and garden beds are bare.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

What type of stone works best for a backyard pathway in Hazleton?

Pea gravel and crushed limestone are both popular pathway choices for Hazleton homeowners. Crushed angular stone compacts more firmly underfoot, which is useful on sloped lots where loose material can shift downhill during heavy rain. Pea gravel is softer underfoot and works well on flat terrain. At Hazleton's elevation, frost heave is a real consideration, so a compacted stone base of at least 4 inches under any formal pathway prevents shifting through the repeated freeze-thaw cycles of the long local winter.

Answer

Can stone help with the drainage problems in my Hazleton yard?

Stone is one of the most effective drainage tools available for Hazleton properties. Because the native sandy loam in this area sits on a relatively shallow base, surface water can pool wherever the grade dips even slightly. A French drain filled with washed gravel or a dry creek bed lined with river stone redirects runoff before it saturates the root zone or works against your foundation. Hazleton's 50 inches of annual rainfall makes some form of active drainage management a smart investment for most properties.

Answer

How deep should I lay stone for a decorative bed in Hazleton?

For a decorative stone bed in Hazleton, a depth of 2 to 3 inches is enough to suppress weeds and give the bed a finished, full appearance. Laying a commercial weed barrier fabric underneath before you spread stone adds a significant layer of weed control, which matters in Hazleton because the sandy loam beneath holds weed seeds that germinate quickly during the warm months between June and September. Stone at 3 inches also stays in place better during the heavy rain events common in this part of Pennsylvania.

Answer

Will stone around my foundation help protect my Hazleton home from water damage?

A stone border around the foundation is one of the most functional landscape decisions a Hazleton homeowner can make. It keeps mulch and soil from building up against siding, which is especially important in a high-rainfall area where organic material stays chronically wet against wood and masonry. A 12 to 18 inch band of clean crushed stone also directs water away from the foundation rather than allowing it to pool, reducing basement moisture issues that are common in Hazleton homes due to the area's significant precipitation.

Answer

Is stone a good option for a low-maintenance section of my Hazleton yard?

Stone is an excellent choice for Hazleton homeowners who want to reduce mowing and watering demands in sections of the yard that are difficult to maintain. Areas under large shade trees, along fence lines, and on steep slopes where grass struggles in Hazleton's sandy loam are all strong candidates for stone coverage. Once installed with a quality weed barrier, a stone area requires almost no seasonal maintenance beyond occasional raking to level the surface.

Answer

What stone size is best for controlling erosion on a slope in Hazleton?

For erosion control on slopes in Hazleton, larger stones in the 1.5 to 3 inch range stay put far better than fine gravel under the force of heavy runoff. Riprap or river cobble works best on steeper grades where velocity is highest. On gentler slopes, a 2 inch crushed stone layer over weed fabric significantly reduces surface water velocity and protects the sandy loam underneath from washing away during Hazleton's spring storms.

Answer

How much stone do I need to cover a 200 square foot area in my Hazleton yard?

At a 2 inch depth, 200 square feet requires approximately 1.2 cubic yards of stone. At 3 inches, that same area needs about 1.9 cubic yards. Stone compacts only slightly, so your calculation will be fairly accurate without adding a large overage allowance. Use the calculator on this page with your exact dimensions to get a precise number, and keep in mind that installations on Hazleton's frost-prone ground benefit from a slightly deeper base layer to resist winter shifting.