POC · Confidential· A&E Ventures
Providence.Garden

A garden that pays attention.

The mobile-first garden assistant that actually knows what's planted, what the sensors are reading, and what the weather is about to do, so the advice you get back is about your garden, not a generic one.

What it does differently

Three things most garden apps miss

Grounded in your garden

Live soil moisture, matric tension, soil temp, and light, plus your local forecast, feed every answer you get back. Nothing generic, nothing guessed, nothing pulled from a model's best approximation of a garden that isn't yours.

Ask, and it acts

Scan a seed packet and your plants get added. Snap a struggling leaf and the issue gets logged. Ask it to lay out your spring planting and it proposes placements you can review and commit one by one. Less chat, more done.

Yours. Private. Portable.

Self-hosted by A&E Ventures on dedicated hardware. Your photos, notes, and identifiable data stay private. A&E Ventures may share anonymized, aggregate patterns for research or product improvement; your personal content is never sold. Bring your own provider credentials and billing flows straight to you.

How it feels

Set up in minutes. Useful in minutes.

  1. 1

    Sketch your planter boxes

    Add boxes with real dimensions, set a grid (rows × columns), and you’ve got a spatial map of what goes where. Two minutes, done.

  2. 2

    Add plants the fast way

    Scan a seed packet. Variety, days-to-maturity, spacing, and barcode come out automatically, ready to review. Or drop a row of eight cucumbers into a cell in one submit.

  3. 3

    Let the assistant do the rest

    Tap the ✨ button anywhere, ask anything. It reads your plants, planters, and sensors, then answers with specifics you can actually use. Need it to act? It will, with your say-so.

A proof of concept

From Providence, Utah. For ten households.

Providence.Garden is a closed beta run by A&E Ventures. We're letting a small set of households in to see if an attentive garden, grounded in live sensors, your planter grid, and a season's worth of context, is actually worth using in the dirt. If you want in, drop us a note.