The driver nailed it on putting the gravel I ordered in front of my trailer and between the sidewalk. Very satisfied with how my flowerbeds look now.

How It Works
Getting started is easy — just follow these simple steps
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.
Select your delivery date
Select a delivery date you'd like for the product to be dropped off at your home
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.
Need Help Calculating How Much Stone & Gravel You Need?
Use our NEW Trace from Satellite tool to get an estimate for your project based on an aerial view of your property
Try Our CalculatorMeasure the length, width, and intended depth of your stone area in feet, multiply all three together to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 to convert to cubic yards for ordering. Janesville pathways and borders typically need 2 to 3 inches of depth, while drainage applications may require 4 to 6 inches of material. Stone settles slightly after the first few rains, so ordering a buffer of 5 to 10 percent extra ensures you have enough to finish the job and fill any low spots that appear after settling.
Complete Your Outdoor Stone Project
Pair your stone order with a delivery of topsoil to correct any grade issues before placing stone in drainage areas or low spots around your Janesville property. Mulch works well alongside stone to define transitions between planted garden beds and gravel pathways, giving your landscape a clean and finished look through every season.
Install a layer of commercial-grade landscape fabric beneath all stone applications in Janesville. The fine-textured silt loam native to this area migrates upward through stone layers surprisingly quickly, especially after freeze-thaw cycles mix soil and gravel together over multiple winters. Landscape fabric creates a permanent barrier that keeps stone clean and functional without preventing water from draining through. Secure the fabric edges with staples and overlap seams by at least 6 inches to prevent gaps where silt can work its way up into the stone over time.
When using stone for a decorative rock garden or xeriscape-style planting area in Janesville, choose plants that tolerate the heat reflection stone creates in summer. Stone surfaces can raise the temperature of the surrounding microclimate noticeably, which is actually a benefit in Zone 5b where the growing season is limited by the short window between the last frost on April 28 and the first frost on October 9. Heat-loving plants like ornamental grasses, sedums, and lavender thrive in these warmer stone-bed microclimates and require very little seasonal maintenance.
For stone pathways in Janesville, plan your layout to route foot traffic away from low areas that collect water after heavy rains. Running a pathway through a consistently wet section will result in the stone sinking and shifting as the underlying silt loam stays saturated and soft through spring. Slightly elevated pathway routes, or areas where you have corrected the grade with fill soil first, give your stone path a more stable and durable base year after year through Janesville's wet springs and hard winters.
The Unique Landscape of Janesville
Decorative and utility stone fills a critical role in Janesville landscapes where drainage, erosion control, and low-maintenance ground cover are high priorities. The city's silt loam soil is susceptible to erosion along slopes and around downspouts, and stone provides a permanent, non-organic solution that does not wash away or decompose the way mulch does over time. With 36 inches of annual rainfall, Janesville properties with slopes, bare areas near foundations, or dense shade spots benefit greatly from gravel or stone as a durable ground cover alternative. Stone pathways and borders also hold up through Zone 5b winters without the freeze-thaw degradation that affects organic materials. The long off-season between the October 9 first frost and April 28 last frost means low-maintenance landscaping solutions like stone pay off over many months of minimal upkeep. Whether used for drainage beds, decorative borders, or dry creek beds to handle runoff, stone is one of the most durable and lasting investments a Janesville homeowner can make.
Explore other options for landscape supply delivery in Janesville, Wisconsin