A digital garden is a personal, evolving collection of notes, ideas, and resources published online. Instead of organizing work into chronological, polished articles like a traditional blog, you "plant seeds" of thoughts and nurture them over time, allowing incomplete ideas to grow and connect with others
Digital gardens are somewhat similar to rabbit holes, tumblr, and myspace walls but they have a deeper history going back to the 80s with talented website builders who helped construct the skeleton of the early internet.
Their recent revival is part nostalgia and part learning in public. Most of the modern iterations, that use Obsidian and the like, are not as appealing to the eye as Mark Bernstein's early internet Hypertext Garden.
endless links
never-ending scroll
Happy Gardening!


Seedlings are thoughts barely started. Likely Jotted down in haste .
Saplings have a substantial amount of content, but much work to be done. Coherence and patterns are just emerging.
Trees are grown-up coherent pieces of thought/essay/expression that are ready for some editorial enhancements.
The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
