Read the signal in your garden.

Trellis brings your plants, weather, garden plan, and notes into one clear view so you know what deserves attention this week.

June 18 · Week 25

This week in your garden

Rain expected Thursday. Hold off on deep watering.

Today's tasks

Check container moisture

Tomatoes and peppers in containers dry out quickly in this heat.

Thin carrots

Bed 2 is ready for thinning to 2" spacing.

Weekly garden prioritiesWeather-aware careSource-backed plant guidanceGarden memory that compoundsAsk Viridia in the garden

Your garden changes every week.
Your plan should too.

Trellis turns the moving pieces—weather, plants, tasks, and your own observations
into a calmer, clearer next step.

"I can see my garden, but I still don’t know what needs attention first."

"The weather changed. Now I’m not sure whether my plan still makes sense."

"My notes, tasks, and plant details are all in different places."

From garden setup to a clear weekly next step.

1

Set up your garden

Add your location, sun exposure, growing style, and the details that shape good advice for your space.

2

Map what you’re growing

Lay out beds, place plants, and catch spacing issues before they become problems.

3

See what matters now

Get a focused view of tasks, weather signals, watch-list items, and recent garden activity.

4

Ask Viridia

Get practical guidance grounded in your actual garden—not a generic answer from the internet.

Viridia
You
What should I do in my garden this week?
WeatherPlanTasks
Start with container moisture and transplant recovery. Your tomatoes and peppers are showing new center growth, which is a good sign, but warm afternoons and cool nights mean consistency matters more than aggressive feeding right now.

Meet Viridia, your garden’s
context-aware guide.

Viridia looks at what is happening in your garden—your weather, plan, tasks, plants, and recent notes—to help you decide what to do next.

It does not guess at your garden from a blank chat box. It uses structured Trellis data, source-backed plant records, and the history you build over time.

Your weatherYour garden glanThis week’s tasksJournal historyPlant guidance

Built for the garden, not just the desk.

Check what matters before you head outside. Mark a task complete at the bed. Capture a note while you still remember what you saw. Ask Viridia while you’re standing in the garden.

Finish a task in one tap
See weather signals before you water
Capture observations while they are fresh

Join the Trellis beta

Use Trellis in your real garden, and help shape what it becomes.

Beta Open

Test and provide feedback.

$0
Create your first garden
Map beds and place plants
Get weekly tasks and weather signals
Keep a living garden journal
Ask Viridia what to tend next
Share feedback that shapes the product
Request Beta Access

Early beta means occasional rough edges.
Honest feedback is part of the invitation.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is Trellis different from a plant tracker?

Plant trackers help you remember what you planted. Trellis helps you understand what needs attention now by bringing together your garden plan, weather, tasks, observations, and plant guidance.

What does Viridia actually use to answer my questions?

Viridia uses the context you build in Trellis—such as your garden profile, plants, plan, tasks, weather, and journal history. It is designed to give grounded guidance, not generic gardening answers.

Does Trellis use my local weather?

Yes. Trellis uses your garden location to surface weather-aware signals that can affect what you do next, such as watering, heat, cold, or transplant timing.

Can I use Trellis for containers, raised beds, and in-ground gardens?

Yes. Trellis is designed for the way real home gardens are built, whether you grow in containers, raised beds, in the ground, or a mix.

Is the beta free?

Yes. Trellis is free during beta while we learn what is most useful, fix rough edges, and improve the experience with tester feedback.

What happens to the feedback I share?

It helps shape Trellis. We use it to identify confusing moments, missing features, bugs, and the parts of the product that are genuinely useful in real gardens.

Start reading your garden's signal.

Set up your garden once. Then come back each week to see what matters, what can wait, and what to do next.