Every seed in the ground is a track that plays for seven seasons. CoworkGarden is the dashboard for what goes where, when it plays, and how to run the studio.
Built around the actual rhythm of growing food at home — the planning, the doing, the noticing, and the eating.
Upload a photo of your yard. Draw zones. Drop plants on the map. Visual memory that survives seasons — and onboards new helpers in one glance.
Add a plant, see what goes near it (good), what to avoid (bad), what's neutral. 500+ pairings sourced from permaculture practice, not folklore.
Photo of yellow leaves → AI diagnosis in under five seconds. Get the cause, the fix, and the timing. No more half-hour Google rabbit holes.
Monday morning: a fresh task list generated from your zone, your plants, the date, and the forecast. "Where do I start tomorrow?" — answered.
"Your lettuce is 12 days from harvest. Your melon needs 47 more days." Per-plant countdown so dinner planning starts before the seed is even up.
Plug in a $10 moisture/pH meter reading and get an amendment plan. Cheap inputs, real numbers, no guesswork.
What Jay builds for himself becomes the dashboard for everyone. Every feature is shipped against a real Zone 6b yard with seventeen seed varieties, a Tokyo-florist–inspired master plan, and a weekly photo log.
The product roadmap is the yard. If it doesn't work for the slow record, it doesn't ship.
Annual pricing, transparent tiers. The Grower plan covers most home gardens; Homestead is for permaculture and family operations.
No. Seedling tier is built for ten plants — that's a single raised bed, a balcony, or a windowsill. Most users start there and grow into Grower over a season.
USDA hardiness zones 6b through 10a today, with detailed companion-planting and harvest-prediction data. Other zones still get the planner and plant doctor; some date-sensitive features are zone-locked.
Web-first, mobile-optimized. The dashboard is fully usable from a phone in the yard. Native mobile apps are on the post-launch roadmap.
One founder — a music producer running 100+ websites and a 17-variety permaculture yard in Zone 6b Pennsylvania. The yard is user #1; the app exists because the spreadsheets stopped scaling.
Photos you upload for plant doctor or yard mapping are processed and discarded — not retained beyond the response. Yard maps you save are stored on your account and never shared.