Wolman [1954] pebble sampling is the most commonly used method to estimate surface bed grain sizes in gravel-bed streams. A few studies documented different results between individual operators or repeated measurements within the same channel-reach obtained by this method. We tested potential differences in pebble sample distributions and related grain-size percentiles (D 10 , D 50 and D 90) between two fluvial geomorphologists and two almost inexperienced students in three channel-reaches and one gravel bar. None of sampled locations provided statistically consistent particle-size distributions and related percentiles when comparing measurements of all operators. The samples of experienced fluvial geomorphologists were most consistent for the channel-reaches with assumed widest range of particle sizes; a post-hoc test documented significant differences for the gravel bar and the lower plane bed reach. Medians of particle-size distributions for the gravel bar were equal for three of four operators; the fourth operator probably included also coarser particle population between the channel bed and bar. It implies that 100 sampled particles are most likely sufficient only for D 50 estimations and homogenous sediment populations (i.e. well-sorted gravel bars). In any other case, much larger number of particles should be sampled in gravel/cobble bed streams to obtain narrower confidence limits of related grainsize percentiles.