Stop guessing. Start growing. The regenerative revolution is now in your pocket.
What if you could design a thriving, high-yield food forest with the precision of a master
strategist? SyntroPedia is the definitive tool for anyone ready to turn degraded land into a
lush, productive ecosystem using the power of Syntropic Agroforestry.
Developed by the experts at Forests4Farming, this is the missing link between complex
ecological theory and real-world results.
Why SyntroPedia?
Designing a syntropic system requires balancing dozens of variables. One mistake in planning can lead to years of lost growth. SyntroPedia centralizes dispersed technical knowledge into a single, intuitive interface, allowing you to plan with 100% confidence.
Main features to power your fieldwork:
Detailed Plant Profiles: Access deep-dive data on growth speed, utility, propagation methods, seed dormancy and storage, height, tree crown, and more.
Syntropic Filters: Find the perfect species for your land. Search by stratum, life cycle, pruning response, or suitability as a “mother tree”.
Collective Intelligence: Benefit from regional data. See which species are thriving in specific climates and contribute your own findings to help the global community.
Key benefits:
Zero planning errors: Reduce structural mistakes in the field by knowing exactly how each plant behaves before you dig the first hole.
Save precious time: Stop hunting through PDFs, different databases and old books. Everything you need is one tap away.
Democratized knowledge: We believe regenerative tools should be for everyone. SyntroPedia is 100% free, supporting the global mission to scale agroforestry.
Who is it for?
Farmers & Technicians looking for precision in production.
Consultants who need a reliable database for client projects.
Organizations working to restore supply chains and biodiversity.
Beginners who want to learn the "Syntropic Way" without the steep learning curve.
Join the movement. Download SyntroPedia and start planting the future today.
A gift from Forests4Farming to the planet.