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August 2, 2011 ·

River Rock Landscaping

curb appeal· DIY· gardening· landscaping· river rock· Tutorial

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The addition of round, smooth river rock to landscaping is always appealing and often quite affordable.

River Rock Wet

The rainbow of colors that magically appear when water meets stone is amazing.

Below is the Sand & Sisal homestead.

It’s a beautiful home that we’ve put a lot of work into to make beautiful inside and out, but it is lacking one important item…

GUTTERS.

Sand & Sisal Homestead

The rooflines all seem to drain to one spot in the front, left of the front door.

It’s a virtual 20 ft. double waterfall each time it rains, cascading into a pool of water around the tall holly tree.

It’s safe to say drainage is a problem.

The rain was splashing so much dirt on the bricks, and eroding the soil, so in lieu of a major gutter system purchase,

we decided on a river rock dry bed.

IMG_3108

We added additional soil, that had previously washed away with the rains, and sloped the grade away from the house.

We dug out shallow channels, layered the areas with crushed pea gravel, and landscaping fabric.

river rock bed

Then 1.5 tons of river rock was brought home from the garden center (that’s 2 Toyota Tundra bed loads).

The rock was $180 for 1.5 tons.

The whole family went to work unloading and layering the rocks in all the prepared dry beds.

river rock by driveway

I added interesting plants between the rocks such as liriope and creeping jenny.

Don’t you just love the chartreuse color!

Creeping Jenny

Hens & Chicks succulents are worry free, add beautiful texture.

All of these plants are self multiplying perennials, which is so very kind to the wallet.

henandchicks

Any corner that receives run-off is a candidate for a faux riverbed.

Keep the rocks trailing in a natural, meandering form, curving and bending.

IMG_3119

And here’s a special DIY TIP for those who find themselves watering the rocks because you love the gorgeous wet color…

spray the rocks with clear Thompson’s Water Seal!!!!!

The dry beds are functional, inexpensive and add another organic element of design to your landscaping.

 

Kim

« Hatteras Island Beach Cottage
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Comments

  1. ℳartina @ Northern Nesting says

    August 2, 2011 at 2:23 am

    Beautiful!!

  2. Susan says

    August 3, 2011 at 7:49 pm

    We have friends w/ river rock…wait until I tell them about the Thompson’s Water Seal!! Thanks for the tip. Beautiful landscaping, lovely home!

  3. - Brittany says

    August 4, 2011 at 9:57 pm

    Oh, I’m so glad you told me what that plant was (my plant expert!) Creeping Jenny! I got some at a plant swap. Love it.

    I also like the landscape rock. Nice job, thanks for sharing.

    Brittany

  4. Ellie says

    August 8, 2011 at 3:15 am

    The river rock looks great! I showed my husband this post cuz we’re working on landscaping around our house. Thanks for the inspiration!

  5. Heather says

    August 10, 2011 at 2:16 pm

    Wow! This is a beautiful landscape! I love the succulents!

  6. Patti says

    August 19, 2011 at 8:13 pm

    Love it. River rock is so pretty and of course it’s natural.

  7. Pattig says

    May 16, 2012 at 11:41 pm

    Love the thompson water seal tip! I recently brought home some wet beach rocks that are not as pretty dry now I know how to get that color back! ¸Thanks! Love your website!

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  11. Debbie says

    June 13, 2013 at 7:57 pm

    I can’t seem to find that rock up here in Southern Maine. I did find it once, but before I finished my project, the company went bankrupt. 🙁

  12. Rollie says

    February 6, 2014 at 4:32 pm

    Thompson’s Water Seal….THANKS!!!! We’ve got river rock lining our modern deck (in Santa Monica, CA.) I’ve been racking my brain trying to figure out how to keep the “wet look”. Awesome!

  13. Patti says

    June 14, 2015 at 12:24 pm

    When do you and how do you spray the rocks with the water seal? when they are dry or wet? I have not found info on this. Can you help me out? Love the concept.

    • Kim @ Sand & Sisal says

      June 15, 2015 at 10:08 am

      Hi Patti,
      We put the watersealer in a pump sprayer (like the kind you use for spraying yard weeds, etc).Then we just sprayed the dry rocks, avoiding any nearby vegetation. It lasts about 4-6 months.
      Thanks!
      KIM

      • Mark says

        July 28, 2015 at 12:47 pm

        Thanks for this information! Was it the Thompson’s WaterSeal multi-surface or the regular wood protector?

        Thanks,
        Mark

        • Kim @ Sand & Sisal says

          July 28, 2015 at 1:25 pm

          Hi Mark!
          I’ll be totally honest, I have no clue. This post was written way back in 2011 so I’m guessing we bought the regular wood protector since I’m suspecting the multi-surface is a more recent product. If you are trying this today, then I’d go for the multi surface. It will last a summer season but then needs reapplying.

          Hope that helps!
          KIM

Trackbacks

  1. Spray Thompson's Water Seal to river rocks to maintain "wet" look. | fungardenz says:
    January 12, 2014 at 4:19 pm

    […] Source […]

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Kim WilsonWelcome to Sand & Sisal: where love of home and sea meet! I share tutorials in DIY, decorating, crafts, gardening, & recipes.  [READ MORE]

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