HEY FRIENDS!! How was your weekend? Hope you enjoyed it!
Last week I mentioned that my fire pit build is finally done. We still need to get some furniture for this space and we’re also going to be landscaping around the perimeter of the patio, which will bring so much to all this hardscape, I can’t wait!!! In the meantime, we’re all happy to be at the point in this project where we can use the firepit and enjoy our backyard this summer. It’s been tons of fun already.
I’ll take you on a tour of the whole space in the near future, but today I wanted to talk about the pea stone since I know many of you also like the look but wonder if it’s a good material to use in real life. Here’s my take on it.
First up, what the heck IS pea stone? Pea stone is under the umbrella of gravel and gets it’s name because the stones are small and, shocker, pea-like in size. At least around here in New England, pea stone is generally harvested from rivers where the rushing waters have worn away the hard edges so the stones are rounded, making them comfortable to walk on on bare feet.
In comparison, crushed stone can be found in a similar size to pea stone, but the process of breaking up the stone in a machine causes the pieces to have hard, angular edges that make the material suitable for driveways, but not so nice for bare feet on a patio. I looked at crushed stone because I liked the color options, and it is literally HALF the cost of pea stone. However, if you walk on the two stones, pea stone wins out hands down.
It’s hard to show the texture and feel of it with a picture, but the pea stone has no sharp edges…
while the crushed stone does.
We actually have a large gravel parking area next to our driveway, and trust me, when the car windows are down, it starts pouring out and you go running out in your bare feet to put the windows up, the gravel is a killer on the tootsies!!!
SOOOOO all this to say, pea stone is a step up from crushed gravel and for that you pay, but it’s still a highly economical way to create a patio – for all the materials necessary, in our expensive neck of the woods (New England), it was about $400 all in for the pea stone patio. Honestly though, I always wanted a charming and beautifully landscaped pea stone patio, so the comparatively low cost of using this material vs. blue stone pavers or other natural stone was a bonus to getting the look I wanted. (I’m still working on charming and beautifully landscaped.
Without further ado, here’s how to install a pea stone patio.
I listed affiliate links to all the supplies I used at the end of the post. Read more about affiliate links here.
1 | CLEAR THE GRASS. My son Peter and I did this a month ago by renting a sod cutter. You can read about the process here. It was a pretty hefty job but the sod cutter made the bare ground perfectly even and ready for the pea stone.
2 | INSTALL EDGING. This is a biggie when using gravel in landscaping……contain it with a border of some kind. Our driveway parking area has a pressure treated wood border that works great if you are installing a squared off design.
This is what Thom Filicia’s gorgeous lakehouse firepit has around it.
Cobblestones make a beautiful border…
{Historic European Cobblestone}
I wanted to use them, but at $3-5 per stone ($400 for the amount I needed) they were out of my price range. Our patio is rounded, so I went with black powder coated metal edging that can be curved. I was a little leery of metal edging at first because it’s not all that aesthetically pleasing in and of itself, but look at the difference it makes between the patio and the gardens!!
We had taken into consideration the width of the garden around the patio when we removed sod, so to install the edging I measured in about 2-3′ from the grass and dug a channel all the way around. The edging comes in 8′ lengths and the ends slide together to create one continuous edge. Once the edging is in place, a rubber mallet is used to drive stakes that come with it through the side and into the ground, securing the edging in place. The edging is buried about 2″ deep, giving the garden and the patio about a 2″ border.
Here is a closeup of both two pieces joined, and the stakes driven through the edging into the ground.
Of course driving stakes into rocky New England land is not exactly a piece of cake……I can’t tell you how many times I had to stop and dig out a huge boulder that was in the way of the stake. There were several stakes I couldn’t drive all the way in at all and Mark went at them with a metal hammer (which kills the powder coated finish but is more effective than the rubber mallet by far). Mark ended up cutting a few of the more stubborn stakes with a sawzall and filed down the edges, because they refused to drive in any further.
Once the gardens are filled with plantings and mulch I’m hoping the metal will disappear, but in the meantime it’s pleasing to the eye to have all the pea stone contained.
3 | INSTALL LANDSCAPE FABRIC. After the edging is installed, but before the pea stone comes into play, I strongly suggest you install a weed barrier.
In the gravel parking area next to our driveway, keeping the weeds at bay is a constant battle. I don’t think landscape fabric controls weeds forever, but if it can cut down on their growth at all, I am all for it!!
Motivated by our troublesome driveway gravel, on the dirt patio we laid down one layer of landscape fabric, overlapping about 8″ as I had read to do. After a couple weeks with the pea stone, a few minor weeds have popped up through the fabric. I recently read that under a pea stone patio, TWO layers of landscape fabric are often used, and since the fabric is fairly inexpensive and easy to install, if I had it to again I would add another layer.
Actually laying down the landscape fabric is easy as pie. Hannah helped me with this part. We rolled the fabric across the dirt and over the metal edging, secured the sheets inside the patio with rust resistant galvanized metal pins that we banged into the ground with a hammer, then trimmed the excess.
We added the pins (aka staples) along the overlap too so the sheeting would stay in place when it was time to install the pea stone. For the most part these go in easily but a few times I had to knock them in with a hammer. Darn rocky soil!!
Laying the landscape fabric goes really quickly – maybe a half hour to do this area.
(I installed the stone veneer on the outside of the fire pit before the pea stone arrived, and then finished up the rest of the fire pit after it was installed.)
4 | INSTALL PEA STONE. Now that the sod is cleared, the area has been contained with edging, and landscape fabric has been installed to inhibit weed growth, you’re ready for the pea stone!
Compare various stone yards in your area for color and cost. I was trying to match the color of the gravel on our driveway but could not find anything like it (a mix of brownstone and gray.) In the end I used a peastone that was more gray than brown, but is variegated so there is a bit of brown and lighter stones in there too.
The stone yard delivered the pea stone and because the patio is right next to the driveway, they were able to back the truck up and dump it right onto the landscape fabric. Woohoo!!! That made spreading it about a billion times easier than having to load up the wheel barrel and make 50 trips from the driveway to the patio. I had the pea stone all spread in about 30 minutes with a shovel and bow rake.
(It’s so nice here early in the morning when there is shade. I love having my coffee out here!)
I wanted about 2-3″ of depth, and the stone yard advised me to get one yard of stone for every 10 feet of space I wanted to cover. For my roughly 18×18′ area I had two yards delivered; however possibly because it was our initial install of the stone, we definitely need more.
Here it is all spread, and I was really starting to freak out with happiness about this project coming together! (You can see the stakes that wouldn’t drive all the way into the ground in the background, pesky little suckers.)
As soon as the pea stone was done I got to work on finishing up the fire pit which I’ll give you the scoop on soon.
At this point you still have to squint to see the vision, but eventually we’ll have plantings all around the patio that will make it feel like it’s own outdoor room (and hopefully create a bit of a sound barrier for the sake of our neighbors!), our grass will green up again (did I mention I hit an irrigation line with the sod cutter??? oops), our house won’t be painted 7 different colors and my dream patio will be done. In the meantime it’s tons of fun to bring the dream to life little by little!
If you have no intention of ever creating a pea stone patio then thank you for sticking with me through all these posts. I’ll get to the pretty and entertaining parts of this patio project soon, I promise!
For interested parties, here are the supplies and sources for this post. Let me know if you have any questions, I’m happy to help if this is a dream of yours too!!
Powder coated metal edging (I bought mine at a stone yard but it is similar to this one)
*Stone Farm partnered with me on the fire pit portion of this project. I asked them to work with me because Mark and I have long admired their products and I really wanted to share how to build a natural stone veneered fire pit with you. Stone Farm is a national resource for reclaimed stone and brick products, along with outdoor living solutions. Many thanks to Stone Farm and Stone Age Manufacturing for making the fire pit project possible.