About this stone

Classic pea gravel with smooth, rounded edges and natural earth tones. A versatile favorite for pathways, patios, drainage, and decorative ground cover.

I contacted Mulch Mound for #57 river rocks and it was easy and fast to get a delivery right before the holiday weekend. Stone was delivered as promised and place exactly where I asked. Excellent service! I will be ordering mulch next!

Odessa Stone Delivery

Odessa Stone Delivery

4.7
137 reviews
Regular price $87.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $87.00
Sale Sold out
Type
Size
Minimum of 3
1 tree planted for every order

About this stone

Classic pea gravel with smooth, rounded edges and natural earth tones. A versatile favorite for pathways, patios, drainage, and decorative ground cover.

I contacted Mulch Mound for #57 river rocks and it was easy and fast to get a delivery right before the holiday weekend. Stone was delivered as promised and place exactly where I asked. Excellent service! I will be ordering mulch next!

For decorative stone coverage in Odessa, a depth of 2 to 3 inches provides solid coverage and enough weight to resist wind scatter for most applications. Drainage channels and French drain trenches should be filled to at least 4 to 6 inches to handle the volume of water that Odessa's intense rain events can produce over sandy loam.
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A yard is approximately 27 cubic feet. As a general guideline, one yard of material can cover an area of about 100-160 square feet at a 2-3 inch depth.

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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 Odessa 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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To figure out how much stone you need, measure each coverage area in length and width, then decide on your depth, with 2 to 3 inches being the standard for decorative coverage and 4 inches for drainage applications. Odessa's windy conditions are a reason to lean toward the deeper end of coverage recommendations, as stone beds that are too thin tend to thin further over time as pieces scatter. Convert your total cubic feet to cubic yards by dividing by 27.

Complete Your Outdoor Stone Project

Stone borders pair extremely well with bulk mulch in Odessa because the stone edging keeps organic mulch from migrating during windstorms and heavy rain events. Adding quality topsoil to any planting areas within or adjacent to your stone layout ensures that plants at the border between mulched beds and stone have the amended soil they need to thrive in West Texas conditions.

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Mulch Mound Pro Tip

When planning stone pathways or patio areas in Odessa, account for the fact that sandy loam beneath the surface will shift and settle, especially after the occasional heavy rain soaks the ground. Install a base layer of compacted road base gravel below your decorative stone to create a stable, level foundation that resists heaving and sinking over time. This extra step is especially worthwhile along high-traffic routes where an uneven surface would become a daily nuisance through the long Odessa growing season.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Odessa's UV index is consistently high throughout the spring and summer months, which means landscape fabrics used under stone can degrade faster here than in cloudier climates. Choose a commercial-grade woven polypropylene fabric rated for UV exposure rather than a thin residential-grade product, as the difference in longevity under West Texas sun is significant. A quality fabric that lasts 10 or more years under stone is far more cost-effective than a cheap product that breaks down and allows weeds to push through within two or three seasons.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

With only 15 inches of rain per year in Odessa, stone can serve double duty as both a decorative element and a passive water-harvesting tool. By sloping stone beds slightly toward planting areas or trees, you direct even small rainfall amounts toward root zones rather than letting water sheet off hard surfaces and evaporate into the dry West Texas air. This low-cost design adjustment can meaningfully extend the time between irrigation cycles for trees and shrubs planted at the edge of a stone coverage area.

The Unique Landscape of Odessa

In Odessa's semi-arid climate, decorative and functional stone is one of the most practical landscape investments a homeowner can make. With only 15 inches of annual rainfall and sandy loam that erodes easily during the occasional strong thunderstorm, stone provides a stable, erosion-resistant ground cover that holds up through both extended dry spells and intense rain events. At Zone 8a with summer temperatures pushing well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, stone coverage areas eliminate the need for irrigation entirely in spots where maintaining turf or planting beds is not practical. Odessa's relatively flat topography means that drainage has to be engineered rather than naturally occurring, and gravel-filled drainage channels are a proven solution for directing water away from foundations during the heavy summer storms that periodically dump rainfall faster than sandy loam can absorb it. Decorative stone also stays looking clean year-round without the fading and breakdown that organic mulch experiences under intense West Texas UV exposure.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

What size gravel works best for a drainage channel in my Odessa yard?

For drainage applications in Odessa yards, a clean 1.5 to 2 inch crushed gravel works very well in channels and French drain trenches because it allows water to move through quickly without fine particles clogging the gaps. Sandy loam in the Permian Basin can migrate into gravel beds over time, so lining drainage channels with landscape fabric before adding stone is a smart precaution that keeps the drainage path functional for years. During Odessa's occasional cloudbursts, a properly sized gravel channel can move a surprising amount of water away from foundations without any erosion.

Answer

Will decorative stone get unbearably hot in Odessa summers and damage my plants?

Dark stones like black Mexican pebble can absorb significant heat in Odessa's summer sun and radiate it back at night, which can stress plants growing right at the border of a stone bed. For plant-adjacent areas, lighter-colored stones like tan or white granite reflect more heat and keep ground temperatures more moderate. A buffer of 12 to 18 inches of mulch around the base of any shrub or tree before the stone begins is a practical way to use decorative stone in Odessa without causing heat stress at the root zone.

Answer

How do I keep my gravel from blowing around in Odessa's wind?

Wind displacement is a genuine concern in West Texas, and the best defense is using heavier stone pieces of at least 1 inch in diameter. Fine pea gravel looks attractive but tends to scatter in Odessa's sustained southwest winds. River rock and crushed granite in the 1 to 2 inch range stays put much better and is a popular choice across Odessa precisely because homeowners have learned from experience that lighter gravel is high-maintenance in this climate.

Answer

Can I use stone to replace my lawn in areas where grass just will not grow?

Stone is an excellent grass replacement in Odessa's difficult growing conditions, and the trend toward partial or full xeriscaping is well established in the Permian Basin. Sandy loam makes it hard to maintain a uniform lawn without significant irrigation, and areas with poor sun exposure or heavy foot traffic are often better served by a decomposed granite or crushed gravel surface. Install landscape fabric first to block the weed seeds that inevitably find moisture along foundation edges and fence lines.

Answer

What type of stone is best for a walkway that will get a lot of use?

For high-traffic walkways in Odessa, decomposed granite compacted to a firm surface is one of the most popular choices because it packs down well, drains quickly after rain, and blends naturally with the West Texas landscape aesthetic. Stepping stones set in a gravel bed are another practical option that provides a stable footing surface while keeping the overall look low-maintenance. Avoid loose round river rock for walkways in high-use areas because it shifts underfoot and can be a trip hazard, especially for older family members.

Answer

How does stone help with erosion around my foundation given Odessa's occasional heavy rains?

Even though Odessa averages only 15 inches of rain per year, that rainfall often arrives in short intense bursts that can scour bare soil away from foundation edges within minutes. A 12 to 18 inch border of crushed gravel or river rock around your foundation absorbs and disperses that impact energy before it strips soil away. The stone also keeps a layer of air and drainage space between moist soil and your siding or brick, reducing moisture intrusion issues that can develop when wet soil sits directly against a foundation after a storm.

Answer

Do I need landscape fabric under my decorative stone in Odessa?

Landscape fabric under decorative stone is strongly recommended for Odessa installations because the sandy loam beneath will work its way up into gravel over time through natural migration, creating a muddy mixed layer that is difficult to clean up. A quality woven fabric also provides a weed barrier that reduces maintenance significantly, because even with low rainfall, West Texas weed seeds like goathead and spurge are aggressive enough to establish in any uncovered soil at a stone border. Use fabric staples to pin it flat before adding stone, especially along edges where wind can lift loose fabric.