Natural Stone · Gravel Pathways

Working with stone, the way Canadian gardens ask for it

Notes on laying flagstone paths, dry-stacking retaining walls, reading local stone, and keeping water moving around hardscaping through freeze-thaw seasons.

A laid flagstone path running through a planted garden
Flagstone path. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
What this site covers

Four recurring questions in stone landscaping

Most stone projects in a Canadian yard come back to the same handful of decisions: what to walk on, what holds back a slope, what stone suits the site, and where the water goes.

Pathways

Flagstone & gravel surfaces

Bedding depth, joint width, and base preparation that survives frost heave on a walked surface.

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Walls

Dry-stack retaining

Batter angle, hearting, and drainage behind a wall built without mortar.

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Water

Drainage around hardscape

Grading away from structures, gravel beds, and where a French drain earns its keep.

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Latest notes

Field notes, updated as the work changes

Flagstone path in a garden setting

Pathways · Updated May 29, 2026

Laying a flagstone path

Base depth, jointing choices, and the freeze-thaw details that decide whether a path stays flat.

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A dry-stacked stone retaining wall

Walls · Updated May 29, 2026

Building a dry-stack retaining wall

Setting a footing trench, battering the face, and using the wall itself to manage water.

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A gravel path winding through a garden

Water · Updated May 29, 2026

Managing drainage around hardscaping

Reading the grade, sizing a gravel bed, and keeping meltwater off paving and footings.

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How a project tends to run

Stone work follows a readable sequence

A typical pathway or wall job moves through the same stages. The pastel markers below mirror that order, from planning the line to the final walkthrough.

Plan line Survey grade Source stone Set & level Walkthrough

These markers are an editorial device, not a fixed standard; sequencing varies with site and season.

A dry stone retaining wall beside a slope
Dry stone retaining wall. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Contact

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Editorial

Linminore is an independent editorial site covering natural-stone landscaping for Canadian conditions.

General enquiries

editor@linminore.org

References used