About this soil

Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.

I used Mulch Mound to have 3 cubic yards of garden soil delivered. The process was easy and I love that I didn't have to call anyone. I placed my order online, picked my delivery date, laid out my tarp and the dirt was delivered. My delivery had to be pushed back, but I was ke...

Rocky Point Soil Delivery

Rocky Point Soil Delivery

4.7
137 reviews
Regular price $67.00 per yard
Regular price Sale price $67.00
Sale Sold out
Type
Style
Minimum of 3 yard
1 tree planted for every order

About this soil

Quality topsoil for lawns, gardens, and landscape projects. Nutrient rich and ready to support strong root development and healthy plant establishment.

I used Mulch Mound to have 3 cubic yards of garden soil delivered. The process was easy and I love that I didn't have to call anyone. I placed my order online, picked my delivery date, laid out my tarp and the dirt was delivered. My delivery had to be pushed back, but I was ke...

For lawn topdressing in Rocky Point, one to two inches of screened topsoil is usually sufficient given the sandy loam base, which blends readily with added material. New garden beds and raised planting areas benefit from six to eight inches of quality soil to give roots room to establish before reaching the native ground below.
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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 soil

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.

What Rocky Point Customers Like About Our Soil

4.7
out of 5 based on 137 reviews
Google Reviews

Need Help Calculating How Much Soil You Need?

Use our NEW Trace from Satellite tool to get an estimate for your project based on an aerial view of your property

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To estimate how much soil you need, calculate the square footage of your project area and decide on your target depth in inches. One cubic yard covers approximately 108 square feet at three inches deep or 162 square feet at two inches deep. For Rocky Point lawn leveling, a two inch average depth is a practical starting point, while new garden beds and raised planting installations typically benefit from six to eight inches of new material.

Complete Your Outdoor Soil Project

After improving your soil, consider adding a layer of mulch to protect your work and reduce moisture loss from Rocky Point's fast-draining beds. Decorative stone borders around new planting areas or raised beds also help define edges and prevent soil from washing onto lawn or hardscape surfaces during heavy rain periods.

Map of Rocky Point, New York

Areas We Deliver Soil in Rocky Point, New York

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Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

How much topsoil do I need to level out low spots in my Rocky Point lawn?

For typical lawn leveling in Rocky Point, a topdressing of one to two inches across low areas is usually enough to restore grade without smothering existing grass. Measure the approximate square footage of each depression and use the standard calculation of one cubic yard covering about 162 square feet at two inches deep. Rocky Point's sandy loam base actually makes leveling easier since the topdressed soil blends in quickly once it is watered and worked.

Answer

Will adding bulk topsoil to my existing garden beds actually help in Rocky Point?

Absolutely. Rocky Point's native sandy loam is nutrient-lean and has limited water retention, so incorporating quality topsoil or garden mix into existing beds raises the organic content and helps plants establish stronger root systems. Turn the new soil into the top six to eight inches of the existing bed rather than layering it on top for the best long-term results.

Answer

What is the difference between topsoil and garden mix, and which one should I use in Rocky Point?

Screened topsoil is best for grading, lawn repair, and filling large areas where structure and drainage matter most. Garden mix is a blended product enriched with compost and organic material that is better suited for vegetable beds and planting areas where fertility is the priority. Given Rocky Point's naturally lean sandy loam, most homeowners find garden mix delivers faster results in ornamental and edible garden settings.

Answer

When is the best time to add soil to my lawn in Rocky Point?

Early fall, from late August through mid-October, is the best window for overseeding and topdressing a Rocky Point lawn. Soil temperatures are still warm enough to support grass germination, summer heat stress has passed, and you have several weeks before the November 17 first frost. Spring is a viable second option, but fall installations tend to establish more reliably in this climate.

Answer

What kind of soil should I fill my raised vegetable beds with in Rocky Point?

A blend of garden mix and compost works very well for raised beds in Rocky Point. Because raised beds drain even faster than the already quick-draining sandy loam beneath them, you want a soil blend with enough organic matter to hold moisture between waterings. Aim for a mix that is roughly 60 percent quality topsoil or garden blend and 40 percent compost to create a productive, moisture-retentive growing environment through the long zone 7b season.

Answer

My Rocky Point backyard collects water in one corner every spring. Will adding topsoil help?

It depends on the cause. If the low area is collecting water due to a grade issue, bringing in topsoil to re-grade the slope away from the problem zone is an effective fix. However, if the drainage issue stems from compaction or a high water table rather than grade, adding soil alone will not resolve it. In many Rocky Point yards, regrading with topsoil combined with a dry creek bed or French drain using crushed stone addresses both grade and water movement together.

Answer

How deep should I work new soil into my Rocky Point vegetable garden?

For vegetable gardens in Rocky Point, till or fork new soil into the top 10 to 12 inches of the existing ground. Most vegetable root systems concentrate in the top foot of soil, and working new material that deep helps break up any surface compaction while blending the added nutrients with the native sandy loam. This depth also improves drainage uniformity, which is particularly important for root vegetables like carrots and beets.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Rocky Point's growing season kicks off around April 15 with the last frost, but soil temperatures in late April can still be cool enough to slow seed germination noticeably. When working new topsoil into a vegetable garden or seeding a repaired lawn area, give the amended bed a week to settle and warm before planting. A basic soil thermometer is a worthwhile investment for timing your plantings accurately in this climate.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

If you are importing topsoil for a large grading project in Rocky Point, have the load placed as close to the work area as possible to reduce wheelbarrow trips across your property. Sandy loam provides a firm, stable base for moving heavy material, but after delivery the soil pile itself can compact the ground beneath it if left in one spot for more than a few days, especially following rain.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Rocky Point's 44 inches of annual rainfall means that poorly graded areas around your home will collect water reliably every season. When adding topsoil to correct low spots, always grade away from your foundation at a slope of at least one inch per foot for the first six feet from the house. Getting the grade right before seeding or planting prevents erosion washback and keeps your amended soil where it belongs through wet weather.

The Unique Landscape of Rocky Point

Rocky Point sits on the North Shore of Long Island where the native sandy loam soil is light, well-draining, and relatively low in organic matter, making it a poor foundation for many landscaping and gardening goals without some amendment. Whether you are filling low spots in a lawn that settled after a wet winter, building up raised vegetable beds, or establishing a new planting area, quality imported topsoil or garden mix provides the nutrient base that Rocky Point's native ground often lacks. The zone 7b growing season here runs nearly seven months from mid-April through mid-November, meaning well-amended soil pays dividends across a long period of active plant growth. Getting the soil right before planting is the single most effective investment a Rocky Point homeowner can make in their landscape, and it is far easier to do correctly at the start than to correct after plants are established. Bulk delivery makes it practical to address large areas in one project rather than piecing together small bags from a garden center.