Cultivating a Better Food Future, Together
GrowGood is a free, open-source project, building a platform to empower farmers to track their operations from seed to sale, creating a verifiable, auditable record of their entire production process. We are creating the digital backbone for a more transparent and regenerative food system.
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For Farmers: Take Control of Your Data
Our goal is to create a free, easy-to-use tool that helps you manage your farm your way. Own your data, track your operations, and build transparency into your production process.
- Free and Open Source - No licensing fees, ever
- A mobile-first design - for logging activities from anywhere
- Own Your Data - Export anytime, use however you want
- Flexible and Customizable - Create workflows that work for you
- A complete audit trail - creating a verifiable history of all operations
- Sensor integration - enabling real-time data from your equipment
For Contributors: Help Grow a Better Food System
We are a community-driven project that welcomes contributions from everyone. Whether you’re a developer, designer, farmer, or just passionate about better food systems, there’s a place for you.
- Open Development - All code is open source and transparent
- FastAPI Backend - Modern, fast, and well-documented APIs
- Flutter Frontend - Modern and native UIs for web, mobile & desktop
- Valueflows - Help build a new economic grammar
- Community Driven - Decisions made collectively
For Funders: Invest in Infrastructure
We’re not just another app—we’re building foundational infrastructure for a new food economy. Join us in creating a more regenerative, resilient, and profitable future for agriculture.
- Valueflows & JSON-LD standards - Interoperable, future-proof data
- Future carbon market access - Paving the way for farmers to participate in new markets
- Enhanced supply chain transparency - Providing ground-truth data for real transparency
- Ecosystem growth - Foster innovation in agricultural technology
Recent Posts
Rewilding the Field
GrowGood as a Digital Commons
There are paddocks in Western Australia’s wheatbelt — tens of thousands of hectares — where the soil crusts white in summer. Salt. The farmers who cleared the mallee scrub for “improved” pasture in the mid-20th century didn’t intend disaster. The short-term arithmetic made sense: clear the deep-rooted native vegetation, plant shallow-rooted annual crops, harvest, repeat. For a generation, it worked. Then the watertable rose. Without the native root systems drawing it down, the groundwater — laden with salt from ancient seabeds — climbed toward the surface. It poisoned paddocks. It killed trees. It sterilised soils that had grown native plants for millennia. Roughly two million hectares of Australian farmland carry this legacy. Not from malice. From simplification.
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Logos & GrowGood: Community Owned Economies
Guest Podcast with Host Sterlin Lujan
Introduction What does a post-capitalist economy look like, and where does value actually live? In this deep-dive session from the Logos Thursday X Space, heterodox economist and monetary theorist Leanne Ussher joins host Sterlin Lujan to explore the frontier of community-owned economies. The conversation traces a fascinating lineage of economic experimentation—from the Wörgl “miracle” during the Great Depression and the Sardex network in Sardinia to modern-day implementations like Will Ruddick’s Sarafu currency in Nairobi’s Kibera slum. Moving beyond theoretical frameworks, this discussion focuses on practical applications: mapping material, ecological, and human flows to reclaim value that mainstream economics is built to ignore.
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GrowGood Mycelium
Part 1: Economics of the Digital Commons
GrowGood is an ambitious open-source digital platform built to empower farmers to reorient their practice towards regenerative agriculture. We are part of a movement and a broader shift toward planetary civics grounded in what Zehra Zaidi & Indy Johar (2024) describe as two defining realities: Firstly, there is an awakening of planetary consciousness regarding the scale of planetary challenges. Groups of stakeholders have recognised that there is finite time to correct destructive pathways and have begun to experiment and generate new propositions. Secondly, in computational advancements we may finally have the tools to match the scale of planetary challenges and build bold, ambitious models of care to repair and sustain our planet which can provide new insights and ways of thinking, being, learning and self-learning.1
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