Tend the patch of earth
you actually live on.
Three specialists for the practice of becoming local. The Observer helps you see your place honestly. The Steward proposes small actions that fit. The Place Keeper notices when you've stopped looking — and brings you outside.
Free to start · No credit card · Cancel anytime
Your place
Back garden · 0.04 acre
Species logged
47
- Observation walks4 of last 5 weeks
- Species frequency12 returning, 3 new
- Stewardship acts1 small thing this week
Last observation: 2 days ago · phenology on track
In rhythmThree answers. Without the eco-guilt.
Who it's for
Adults who want a real relationship with one specific place — a garden, a balcony, a stretch of city park, a windowsill — and a way to track it without turning it into a project.
Block 1 of 3What we deliver
A practice of weekly observation. Small stewardship actions that fit your time. A multi-year log of what changes — and what returns.
Block 2 of 3How it works
Three specialists read your own field notes. Six steps from passing-by to tending. You walk and watch; we never claim conservation status on your behalf.
Block 3 of 3
Built on infrastructure serious people already trust
- Your field notes · sealed
- Your own observations · only that
- Every recommendation cites what you saw
- Protected-species flag → real steward
- Multi-year place log, exportable
- 14-day no-questions refund
- Frontier AIreasoning
- Stripepayments
- Supabasedata layer
Same workforce as every cosmos369.ai vertical. Same compliance discipline. Same audit log. Different specialists for this domain.
Three specialists.
One layered answer.
One who helps you see your place honestly. One who proposes small actions that fit your time. One who notices when you've stopped looking and gently brings you back outside.
- 01·Sees
Observer
Origination · perception · honest diagnosis
Reads your field notes and surfaces the phenology, the returning species, the seasonal patterns you'd miss between visits. Never advice; honest pattern-naming.
- Reads your weekly observation log only
- Names what's returning, what's new, what's missing
- Surfaces patterns your individual walks can't see
This year
47 species · 12 returning · 3 newcomers
- 02·Decides
Steward
Harmony · synthesis · runs the six-step loop
Proposes small stewardship actions sized to your real time and your real place — no grand restoration plans, no eco-guilt.
- Actions sized to 10 minutes, not 10 hours
- Native to your soil, your light, your time
- Verify against do-no-harm before recommending
This week
Leave the leaves · 1 corner unmown
- 03·Guards
Place Keeper
Completion · audit · reversibility · monitoring
Watches the observation cadence and protects the place itself. Notices 5+ days without observation. Stops anything that crosses into regulated or risky terrain.
- Tracks observation frequency (5+ days off = nudge)
- Protected-species + fragile-habitat detector
- Has veto on Steward (no over-intervention)
This week
2 walks · 1 act · no regulated flags
Six steps. Skipping one is a bug.
Every specialist runs the same six-step loop from your intent to a delivered outcome. The loop is the only path work moves through Nature. Verify before Hand-off is non-negotiable.
Step 1 of 6
IntakePull your last 30 days of field notes + species log + a photo or two if you have them.
Step 2 of 6
DiagnoseNames what's returning · names what's new · names what you missed this season.
Step 3 of 6
PlanProposes a stewardship action: small, native, reversible — sized to this week.
Step 4 of 6
ExecuteGenerates the week: observation prompts, one stewardship task, a watch-list of species.
Step 5 of 6
VerifyStress-tests against do-no-harm: would a local naturalist call this tending or meddling?
Step 6 of 6
Hand-offOne page: the week's walks, the stewardship action, the species to watch for.
Every specialist runs this loop. Skipping a step is a bug, not an optimization.
One question.
Three specialists.
Nine beats.
The trace below is a faithful sketch of one real Nature session. Three specialists, each contributing the loop steps they own, converging into a single composed outcome.
The user
Tom, 52, semi-retired editor. 0.04-acre garden, north-facing. Three years of wildflower attempts. 14 months of observation logs in the app.
What 3-6-9 did
Nature stayed focused on Nature. The Steward had to Verify against do-no-harm before Execute — the step that ruled out a grand re-wilding plan in favour of a single corner. The Place Keeper killed the over-intervention instinct.
Step 1 of 6 · Intake
Reads Tom's 14 months of field notes + 80 photos + the 3 prior wildflower attempts (June-July die-offs).
Step 2 of 6 · Diagnose
Three patterns: the wildflowers thrive May/early June then disappear · slug evidence is sparse · he mows the surrounding lawn weekly through summer.
Step 6 of 6 · Hand-off
Reflects: “It's not the slugs. The wildflowers are getting outcompeted by lawn grass advancing in summer.” Confirms with Tom.
Step 3 of 6 · Plan
Designs: a 1m × 1m unmown corner around the wildflower patch · skip mowing entirely June through August · trial Yellow Rattle to slow the grass naturally.
Step 4 of 6 · Execute
Generates the week: mark the corner with stones, stop mowing the 1m radius, log species weekly through summer, sow Yellow Rattle in autumn.
Step 5 of 6 · Verify
Stress-tests: would a local wildlife trust call this tending? Yes — unmown corners + Yellow Rattle are standard meadow-establishment guidance.
Step 5 of 6 · Verify
Audits: no protected species in his observation log, no fragile habitat flags, Yellow Rattle is native and non-invasive in his region.
Step 6 of 6 · Hand-off
Flags one watch: if tall grass attracts ticks (it can), surface that to Tom early-summer so he's not surprised.
Step 1 of 6 · Intake
Late August: wildflowers still present in the unmown corner. 4 species not previously logged. Tom photographs a bumblebee species new to his log.
Tom gets a 1m corner, an unmown patch, and a sowing plan. The wildflowers stay through August.
Year two: he expands the corner. Six new species logged. He's not gardening; he's tending the place. And he can see it.
Three tiers.
The math doesn't change.
Every tier ships the three specialists running the six-step loop. Higher tiers unlock how often the specialists run, multi-user mode, and team-level features.
Starter
Tier ISingle place · weekly cadence
Billed monthly · cancel anytime
Start free trial- All 3 specialists · weekly cadence
- One place (≤ 0.25 acre or one balcony)
- Species + phenology log
- Native-action library (region-aware)
- Single-region framing
- Educational disclaimers + GDPR DSAR
Single user, single cadence.
Core
Tier IIFull activation · multi-place · season-aware
Billed monthly · cancel anytime
Start free trial- Everything in Starter
- Up to 3 places (garden, allotment, local park)
- Season-aware action library
- Photo recognition (your photos only)
- Protected-species detector + escalation
- Multi-year phenology export
The plan for serious solo stewards.
Sovereign
Tier IIIHousehold + community · 6 stewards · shared place log
Billed monthly · cancel anytime
Start free trial- Everything in Core
- Up to 6 stewards (household + neighbours)
- Shared place log (street-tree, community garden)
- Local-wildlife-trust handoff (read-only)
- Priority response under 24h
- Early access to new specialists
For households and neighbourhood stewardship groups.
Free to start · No credit card required · Cancel anytime · Full data export at any time
The compliance, the math, the data.
Real answers. If a question isn't here, our support team replies within 24 hours.
Adjacent, not identical. Gardening apps plan crops and ornamentals. Nature is about tending a specific place — its species, its rhythms, its season — and stewardship that respects what's already there. The Steward proposes actions; the Place Keeper guards against over-intervention.
Have a question we should add here? hello@cosmos369.ai — we read every one.
Tend the place you have.
Log a single walk. See your place named honestly. Take one small action that fits.
No credit card · Cancel anytime · Full data export at any time