About
A field notebook for your garden — one that remembers.
MyVeggieGarden is a vegetable garden journal and season planner. It tracks what you grew, how it went, and helps you plan a better garden next year.
What it does
Most garden apps stop at planning — where to put plants, when to plant them. MyVeggieGarden connects the full loop:
- Plan — review last season, decide what to grow again, schedule your timeline from frost dates
- Do — auto-generated tasks tell you what needs doing and when
- Record — log milestones, notes, and status as things happen
- Learn — AI synthesizes your notes into insights for next season
Each year builds on the last. That's the core idea.
What makes it different
- Variety-first tracking. "Cherokee Purple Tomato" is a first-class entity — not "Tomato > (no variety)." Each cultivar has its own history, logs, and performance data across seasons.
- The journal is the product. Not a feature buried in a sidebar. Every part of the app is designed around recording what happened and learning from it.
- AI that reads your notes. Not generic gardening advice. MyVeggieGarden's AI reads what you actually wrote about your plants and surfaces patterns — which varieties worked, which zones had problems, what timing adjustments to make.
- Honest about what it knows. Dates and recommendations only appear when your inputs justify them. No fake-precise harvest dates for a generic "tomato" with no variety or start date.
- Modern design. Clean, data-forward UI inspired by tools like Linear and Stripe. Not the 2005 garden-app aesthetic that dominates the category.
Who it's for
Home vegetable gardeners who've been at it a few seasons. The kind of person who keeps a notebook — even messy one-line notes — and wants each year to build on the last. Not beginners looking for "what should I plant" (though it helps with that too). Gardeners who already know what they like growing and want to get better at it.
Available on
- Web — myveggiegarden.app
- iOS — iPhone and iPad
Built by
MyVeggieGarden is built by Rebecca, a software engineer and home gardener. It started from a real problem: wanting to remember what grew well, what didn't, and why — so that next season could be the best one yet.