You talk about your garden. Percy handles the rest.

Tell Percy what you see. Ask Percy what happened. Tell Percy what's next. Your garden's past, present, and future — all in one place, all handled for you.

The basics

1

Tell Percy what you see.

Percy is voice-first because gardens are a hands-dirty, phone-in-your-back-pocket kind of thing. When you notice something — a first bloom, a ripe tomato, a bed that needs water — you hold the button like a walkie-talkie and say what you see. That’s it. No navigating to a screen, no finding the right plant in a list, no filling out a form.

Say whatever comes naturally:

  • Planted the sugar snap peas along the back fence today.
  • The David Austin roses are going absolutely nuts right now.
  • First zucchini of the season. It’s massive.
  • Something’s eating the basil. Little holes all over the leaves.
  • Pulled the garlic today. Biggest bulbs I’ve ever grown.

You don’t need to use the right terminology. You don’t need to categorize anything. Just talk the way you’d talk to a friend who asked what’s going on in the garden.

After you speak, Percy plays it back conversationally, confirming the plant, the observation, and any action or issue it picked up.

You said: “The strawberries are ripening like crazy. Picking a handful every morning now.

Percy responds: “Got it. Strawberries, harvesting daily. That’s exciting! I’ll keep track. Sound right?

You tap “That’s right” and you’re done. The whole thing takes ten seconds. Then you’re back to enjoying your garden.

2

Ask Percy what happened.

This is the part that changes everything. Percy doesn’t just store your notes in a list. Percy builds a living picture of your garden that you can have a conversation with — from day one.

  • When did I plant the super sweets?
  • Which tomatoes did I say were worth growing again?
  • What did I do about the squash bugs?
  • How did the garlic do in the raised bed?

Three weeks into your first season, you’ll ask Percy something you’ve already forgotten, and Percy will know. That’s not a year-two feature. That’s the first time you open the app and notice something you can’t quite remember.

No other garden tool does this. Not a notebook, not a spreadsheet, not another app. You’re not searching through entries or scrolling a timeline. You’re asking a question and getting a real answer, based on what you’ve actually told Percy about your garden.

3

Tell Percy what’s next.

Percy also holds your intentions. Just say what you’re planning, the same way you’d say anything else.

Say whatever comes naturally:

  • Remind me to fertilize these in two weeks.
  • I should start the next round of lettuce seeds before this batch bolts.
  • I want to try growing dahlias from tubers next spring.

Percy surfaces a reminder card when the time is right. No push notifications. No separate reminders app. Just a card that says “You wanted to do this — ready?” You tap it, do the thing, and tell Percy. This is how succession planting becomes something you actually do instead of something you mean to do. And it’s useful from the very first day, before Percy has a full season to draw from.

What a season with Percy actually looks like

Here’s how it plays out from spring to winter.

Early Spring

You’re planning your garden. Maybe you’re flipping through seed catalogs or standing in front of empty beds trying to remember what went where last year.

You ask Percy: “What did I grow last year?

Percy gives you the full picture. What you planted, where it went, what did well, what struggled. Percy reminds you that the cherry tomatoes were incredible in the west bed, that the lettuce bolted too fast in the south bed, and that you said you wanted to grow more daffodils this year. You don’t have to dig through notebooks or scroll through old photos with timestamps. It’s all there.

And if you’ve been using Percy for more than a season, Percy starts coming to you. “Last year you started tomato seeds indoors around March 12. Planning to do the same?” That’s not a generic calendar reminder. That’s based on what you actually did, in your garden, last year.

Planting Season

As you start putting things in the ground, you tell Percy what’s going where.

  • Put the Roma tomatoes in the west bed. Cherokee Purples along the fence.
  • Started cucumber seeds today.
  • Transplanted the dahlias. Fingers crossed this is their year.

Each one takes a few seconds. You’re just narrating what you’re doing while you’re doing it, and Percy files it all away.

Mid-Season

This is when your garden is at its fullest: blooming, producing, and changing every day. You start noticing more because you know nothing’s going to slip through the cracks.

The lettuce is looking good but you know from experience it’ll bolt in the heat. You tell Percy: “I should start the next round of seeds before this batch bolts.” Two weeks later, you open the app and there’s a card: “You wanted to start the next round of lettuce seeds. Ready?” You tap it, plant the seeds, and tell Percy. No gap in your harvest. That’s succession planting, and Percy just helped you do it without having to keep it all in your head.

  • The echinacea is blooming and the bees are all over it.
  • Squash leaves are looking powdery. Might be mildew starting.
  • Picked the first cucumbers today. Way earlier than last year.
  • The dahlias in the south bed are unbelievable. Best year yet.

A week later, you mention the powdery mildew again. Percy notices the pattern: “You’ve mentioned powdery mildew on the squash twice now. Last year you tried milk spray and it worked after two applications. Want to try that again?”

Percy captures all of it. The wins and the problems. The things you’d celebrate and the things you’d troubleshoot. Nothing gets lost because you forgot to write it down later.

By your second season, Percy also starts reaching out on its own: “Heads up. Last year cabbage worms showed up the first week of June. Might be worth adding row cover this week.” That’s the difference between a journal and a companion who’s got your back.

Harvest

The best part. You tell Percy what you’re picking and how things turned out.

  • The Brandywines are the best tomatoes I’ve ever grown. Unreal flavor.
  • Pulled the garlic. Small bulbs. Maybe I planted too late.
  • Zinnias are absolutely stunning this year. Cutting bouquets every week.

These are the moments that become gold next year. Not because you’re going to remember to go back and read your notes, but because Percy will bring them up at exactly the right time. Next spring when you’re choosing tomato varieties: “Last year you said the Brandywines were the best you’d ever grown. Want to plant them again?”

Your own enthusiasm, reflected back when it matters most.

End of Season: Your Migration Report

When the season winds down, Percy creates your Migration Report: a year-in-review of everything that happened in your garden. Your most-mentioned plants, your seasonal timeline, the challenges you overcame, the varieties that became your favorites. Think of it as your garden’s annual story, written for you automatically.

You don’t have to do anything to make this happen. Percy has been building it all season from your voice notes, turning a season’s worth of small moments into something you can look back on and plan from.

Your first Migration Report is part of your free season. It becomes your planning document for next year, except you didn’t have to write it. And starting in year two, it includes year-over-year comparisons: what improved, what patterns emerged, and what you learned.

That’s when it gets really fun.

Migration Report launching Winter 2026.

The longer you use it, the more valuable it gets.

Percy is useful from your first week. You can ask questions, capture observations hands-free, and tell Percy what you’re planning. But the longer you use it, the more powerful it becomes. Here’s how that plays out.

Year One: Percy Learns

Your first season, Percy captures your observations, answers your questions, remembers your plans, and gives you your first Migration Report. Three weeks in, you’ll find yourself asking something you’ve already forgotten, and Percy will know. That alone is more than most gardeners have ever had.

But something else happens in year one that we didn’t fully expect. You start noticing more. Because you know Percy is there to catch it, you pay attention to things you might normally walk past. The way the light hits the back bed in late afternoon. Which flowers the pollinators prefer. When the first fireflies show up. Percy doesn’t just remember your garden. It changes how you see it.

Year Two: Percy Connects the Dots

This is when Percy transforms from helpful companion to something you can’t garden without. Percy has a full season of your observations to draw from, and now two things happen.

First, Percy can answer your questions with real depth:

  • Your Sungolds ripened July 2nd last year. Keep an eye on them.
  • Your tomatoes did best in the west bed last year. Worth planting there again?
  • The dahlias didn’t make it through winter in the north bed, but they came back strong in the raised bed.

Second, Percy starts coming to you. Instead of waiting to be asked, Percy notices when seasonal patterns line up with last year’s observations:

  • Last year you side-dressed the tomatoes with compost in late May. It correlated with your best tomato year. Worth doing again?
  • Aphids showed up on your roses mid-May last year. Might be worth checking them this week.

It’s not generic advice from a gardening textbook. It’s advice from your own garden’s history, brought to you right when it’s useful.

Your second Migration Report shows side-by-side comparisons: what changed, what improved, and what patterns are emerging across seasons.

Year Three and Beyond: Percy Knows Your Garden Better Than You Do

Multiple seasons of observations mean Percy can spot trends you’d never catch on your own. Which beds produce the best of which crops. When your specific microclimate typically gets its first frost. Which varieties you keep coming back to because they just work in your garden.

By now, Percy isn’t just remembering. Percy is anticipating.

  • Your basil has bolted in early July three years running. Succession planting in late June might buy you a few more weeks.
  • Peppers consistently do better in your east bed. Probably the morning sun and wind protection.
  • Your notes show that when you water deeply twice a week, the tomatoes outperform daily light watering. Even in heat waves.

These aren’t guesses. These are patterns from your garden, across multiple seasons, that you’d never connect on your own. That’s not a journal. That’s a companion who knows your garden better than anyone.

Percy is for gardeners who’d rather be gardening.

If you’ve tried other garden apps and found yourself spending more time updating the app than actually being in the garden, Percy is the opposite. No task lists. No Gantt charts. No dashboards. Just your voice and a companion that handles the organizing, so you can stay present instead of staring at a screen.

If you keep a paper journal, Percy gives you a superpower your notebook never could: a garden memory you can actually talk to. Everything you loved about journaling, plus a sidekick that reads it back to you when it matters.

If you don’t track anything right now but wish you could remember more season to season, Percy is the easiest possible way to start. No setup, no learning curve. If you can talk about your garden, you can use Percy.

And don’t worry about using it perfectly. You don’t need to log something every day. Use Percy when something notable happens: when you plant something, notice a problem, or harvest something you’re excited about. Even 20 or 30 observations in a season gives you more to work with next year than you’ve ever had. There’s no streak to maintain and no guilt if you miss a week. Percy just picks up where you left off.

Percy doesn’t just remember your garden. It changes how you see it.

Free for your first growing season. Then $20/year as Percy starts connecting the dots: pattern recognition, seasonal reminders, and advice based on your garden's history. No credit card required. Your data stays yours either way.

Launching Spring 2026