We wanted to eat more fiber.
So we grew a garden.
Most people eat about half the fiber they need each day. Not because they don't care, but because tracking it has always been tedious. We thought the problem wasn't motivation, it was that the tools weren't worth opening.
Fiber Flora replaces the spreadsheet with a garden that responds to what you eat. Log a meal with lentils and a new flower appears. String a few good days together and your garden starts to fill out. The idea is that seeing your progress grow into something tangible makes it easier to keep going.
We also designed it for the days you don't hit your goal, or the weeks you forget to log at all. Your garden stays exactly where you left it and picks back up when you do.
How it works
We wanted logging fiber to feel more like tending a garden than filling out a form. Here's what that looks like.
Your garden reflects your habits
Each day you hit your fiber goal, something new blooms. Longer streaks unlock rarer plants. If you miss a day, your garden stays where it is and waits for you to come back.
Photo-based logging
Take a photo of your plate and the app estimates the fiber content. No searching through databases, no weighing portions.
Progress you can learn from
The app tracks which meals bring you closest to your goal and which days you tend to fall short, so you can adjust without guesswork.
Optional gentle reminders
You can turn on daily nudges if they help, or leave them off. If you go quiet for a while, we won't pile on.
On our roadmap
A few things we're building next.