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.

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 decorative stone beds in Succasunna, a 3 to 4 inch depth provides the coverage needed to suppress weeds and present a clean, finished appearance through all four seasons. Drainage applications and dry creek beds typically require 6 to 8 inches of stone depth to handle the volume of water that Succasunna's 50 inches of annual rainfall generates during peak summer storm events.
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 100-160 square feet at a 2-3 inch depth.

Succasunna Stone Delivery

Succasunna 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 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

Classic pea gravel with smooth, rounded edges and natural earth tones. A versatile favorite for pathways, patios, 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 decorative stone beds in Succasunna, a 3 to 4 inch depth provides the coverage needed to suppress weeds and present a clean, finished appearance through all four seasons. Drainage applications and dry creek beds typically require 6 to 8 inches of stone depth to handle the volume of water that Succasunna's 50 inches of annual rainfall generates during peak summer storm events.
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 100-160 square feet at a 2-3 inch depth.

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 Succasunna 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 estimate stone for your Succasunna project, measure the area in square feet, decide on your target depth in inches, and use our calculator to find the cubic yards needed. For drainage features and erosion control work on sloped Succasunna properties, add 15 to 20 percent to your calculated quantity since irregular terrain and the need for deeper coverage in wetter zones often means the initial estimate comes up short. Getting the order right the first time saves a second delivery fee and keeps your project on schedule.

Stone Types We Deliver in Succasunna

Mulch Mound delivers bulk stone by the cubic yard to homes and properties throughout Succasunna, giving you a convenient way to tackle any landscaping project from the ground up. Homeowners searching for bulk gravel by the yard will find our selection covers the most popular sizes and styles for New Jersey yards. Our stone selections are well suited to the sandy loam soils and mature residential landscapes common throughout this part of Morris County.

Pea Gravel

Pea gravel is a top choice for homeowners looking to add a clean, low-maintenance surface to pathways, patios, or garden beds. Its smooth, rounded edges and warm earth tones complement the colonial and ranch-style homes typical of this part of New Jersey, and it drains exceptionally well through the region's sandy loam soils.

1-2" River Stone

The 1 to 2 inch river stone brings a polished, natural look to feature landscaping and dry creek beds. Its smooth surface and generous size make it ideal for property owners in Succasunna who want a bold decorative accent that holds up well through New Jersey's freeze-thaw winters without shifting or compacting.

Complete Your Outdoor Stone Project

Pairing a stone delivery with screened topsoil lets you grade problem areas in your Succasunna yard while creating defined stone drainage channels that work together as a complete stormwater management solution. Adding mulched planting beds alongside stone pathways and borders creates the kind of layered landscape that stays genuinely low-maintenance through Succasunna's full four-season weather cycle.

Map of Succasunna, New Jersey

Areas We Deliver Stone & Gravel in Succasunna, New Jersey

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Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Succasunna's Zone 6b winters bring repeated freeze-thaw cycles from October through March that shift loose stone and lift pathway edges over time. Installing stone pathways over a compacted 4-inch base of crusher run gravel dramatically reduces the settling and heaving you will see each spring. Taking the extra time to tamp and level your base before placing decorative stone on top means you spend far less effort re-leveling and refilling pathways as the seasons change year after year.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

Sandy loam soil in Succasunna does not hold a clean edge well on its own, which means stone bed borders tend to sag and mix with adjacent lawn soil over time without proper separation. Installing a metal or heavy plastic landscape edging strip between your stone beds and lawn areas keeps the boundary sharp and prevents grass from creeping into the stone through the growing season. This also keeps mowing equipment from scattering stone onto the grass, which is a common frustration for Succasunna homeowners with stone beds close to mowing areas.

Mulch Mound Pro Tip

For dry creek beds and drainage channels in Succasunna, choose rounded river rock rather than angular crushed stone as the visible top layer. Rounded stone allows water to flow through more freely during the heavy summer storms that contribute significantly to Succasunna's 50-inch annual rainfall total, while the angular base layer beneath holds the channel in position. This combination of functional base stone and decorative river rock gives drainage features a natural appearance that blends into the Morris County landscape while still doing serious erosion-control work through every wet season.

The Unique Landscape of Succasunna

Decorative and functional stone is one of the most practical landscape investments for Succasunna homeowners, particularly given the town's combination of sloping terrain at 722 feet elevation and 50 inches of annual rainfall. Stone pathways, drainage beds, and erosion control features handle the runoff that Succasunna's summer thunderstorms generate without washing away the way mulch or loose soil would along grades and slopes. Sandy loam soil in this area is prone to surface erosion and compaction from foot traffic, making stone the clear choice for high-use zones, driveway edges, and any area that sees regular water flow. The wide freeze-thaw cycles that come with Zone 6b winters, with a first frost around October 10 and temperatures that drop well below freezing through January and February, mean stone materials hold up year after year without the cracking and heaving that can affect concrete or poured surfaces. Whether you are creating a dry creek bed to manage stormwater or laying a pathway through a shaded garden, bulk stone delivery makes large-scale projects genuinely economical. Succasunna's natural landscape topography rewards thoughtful stone placement that works with the property's existing drainage patterns rather than against them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click a question to see the answer

Answer

What kind of stone works best for a backyard pathway in Succasunna?

For walking paths in Succasunna, a compacted crushed gravel such as a quarter-inch clean or crusher run provides a stable surface that handles foot traffic without shifting the way rounded pea gravel tends to. The freeze-thaw cycles that come with Zone 6b winters here cause rounded stones to shift more noticeably after thaw, while angular crushed stone locks together and resettles more consistently each spring. Lay the pathway over a 4-inch compacted base for best long-term results, especially in areas that receive direct runoff from sloped sections of your yard.

Answer

Can stone actually help with the drainage problems in my Succasunna yard?

Stone is one of the most effective tools for managing water in Succasunna yards, where 50 inches of annual rainfall taxes even well-graded properties. A dry creek bed filled with river rock or larger fieldstone creates a defined channel for stormwater to follow, protecting the sandy loam soil on either side from erosion and directing runoff away from your foundation and lawn areas. For smaller drainage swales and French drain fills, a washed crushed stone in the 3/4-inch to 1.5-inch range allows water to move freely through the stone layer without fine particles clogging the flow over time.

Answer

How do I use stone to stop erosion on the sloped section of my Succasunna property?

Slopes in Succasunna are particularly vulnerable to erosion because the sandy loam top layer has little natural cohesion when fully saturated by heavy rains. Lining the base of a slope with a row of larger fieldstone or boulders creates a toe wall that catches moving soil and slows water velocity coming down the grade. On the slope face itself, a layer of river rock or rip rap stone gives water a textured surface to travel down rather than carving erosion channels directly into the soil, which is a common problem in Succasunna yards after the summer thunderstorm season.

Answer

Is stone a good low-maintenance alternative to mulch for some areas of my Succasunna yard?

For certain areas, absolutely. Around foundation plantings, along fence lines, or in narrow side-yard strips that are difficult to access regularly, stone requires far less annual maintenance than organic mulch in Succasunna's wet climate. Mulch in this area needs replenishing every year due to the combination of rainfall-accelerated decomposition and the Zone 6b weather cycle, while a properly installed stone bed can last many years with only occasional raking to refresh its appearance. Keep in mind that stone does not add organic matter to Succasunna's sandy loam the way mulch does, so planted areas that switch to stone may need supplemental fertilizing through the growing season.

Answer

What size stone should I use around my Succasunna home's foundation border?

For foundation borders in Succasunna, a 1.5 to 2-inch washed river stone or decorative cobble strikes the right balance between drainage performance and visual appeal. Finer gravel tends to splash out of the bed during heavy rainstorms, which is a genuine concern given Succasunna's annual rainfall totals, while larger stones are harder to keep positioned neatly near lawn edges. A 4-inch deep bed of medium river stone around the foundation perimeter also helps direct water away from the house by creating a permeable surface that does not compact under the drip line of your roofline.

Answer

Will stone installations hold up through Succasunna's winter freeze-thaw cycles?

Natural stone is one of the most frost-resistant landscape materials available, which makes it an excellent long-term investment in Zone 6b Succasunna, where the ground goes through repeated freeze-thaw cycles from October through March. Unlike pavers or poured concrete, loose stone simply shifts slightly and settles back without cracking or spalling. Pathway and drainage installations do benefit from a properly compacted base layer before stone is placed, since frost heaving in the base soil can create uneven surfaces over time. A 4-inch crusher run base beneath pathway gravel significantly reduces that heaving effect through Succasunna winters.

Answer

How much stone do I need for a 10-by-10 patio or gravel seating area in Succasunna?

For a 10-by-10 foot stone patio base or gravel seating pad, you will need approximately 1.2 to 1.5 cubic yards of material for a 4-inch deep application. Succasunna homeowners should plan for a slightly deeper base of 4 to 6 inches compared to warmer climates, because the freeze-thaw action in this Zone 6b area can cause visible settling if the base is too thin going into winter. Top the base with a 2-inch layer of your chosen decorative stone for a finished surface, and use a permeable stone rather than packed gravel on top so rainwater from Succasunna's frequent summer storms drains through naturally.