Idea 6: Frame the Tank With River Rock, Pavers, and Tough Plants

Use hardscape to make the pool feel settled
A ring of river rock landscaping, chunky paver patio sections, or concrete slab stepping stones makes a stock tank pool feel anchored. It stops the pool from looking like it’s floating in the lawn.
I love this because it also solves the muddy-foot problem. Wet grass around a pool gets messy fast, especially with kids running around.
Pick plants that can handle splash and heat
Think tough, architectural plants instead of delicate little flowers. Ornamental grasses, yucca-like shapes, sedge, rosemary, lavender, and sturdy container shrubs all hold their own visually.
If you’re in hot regions like Dallas-Fort Worth or Los Angeles, this approach makes even more sense. Drought-tolerant planting is still a big outdoor design trend, and it fits the rustic industrial mood really well.
Keep the palette simple
Don’t use ten kinds of stone and twelve plant textures. I like one main rock, one paver style, and two to four plant types repeated with purpose.
That repetition is what makes a small DIY pool project look polished. When people overmix materials, the yard starts feeling cluttered instead of curated.
A smart choice for families and pets
Hardscape plus tough plants usually means less mud, less damage, and easier cleanup. That’s a major win if your backyard gets a lot of foot traffic.
But if your dream pool is more social than serene, the next idea is where things get really fun. Hit the next button below, because a bench-wrapped cowboy pool is basically summer entertaining in one smart design move.


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