A long view, written in soil.
A farm built like
a careful piece of hardware.
Fynd Farm is a long-horizon project from the Fynd team — an attempt to ask, very seriously, what an Indian farm could look like if it were designed from first principles, with the same care, precision, and patience we bring to consumer technology.

Why a software company is planting trees.
Fynd is a technology company. For a decade we have built commerce, logistics, and retail systems used by some of the largest brands in the country. Along the way, we developed an operating culture: small senior teams, hardware-style rigour, and an obsession with shipping things that work in the real world.
Fynd Farm is the application of that culture to a different substrate — soil and weather instead of silicon and code. It is, in spirit, our most ambitious project: a real piece of land, in a real climate, with real plants, that we are determined to engineer into a calm, productive, regenerative whole.
The reference, openly, is Dyson Farming in the United Kingdom — the idea that a small, well-led engineering team can ship genuine breakthroughs in agriculture. The execution is deliberately Indian: mid-tech protected cultivation, climate- resilient agroforestry, and a small hospitality footprint woven into the same view-corridor.
A working blueprint for the next Indian farm.
To engineer one farm — at human scale, in the Indian context — that integrates the best of agronomy, hardware, and software, season after season.
Compose, don't rebuild. Choose excellent partners for sensors, robotics, and post-harvest. Own the data backbone and the design language that ties them together.
Yield per acre, water per kilogram, energy per cycle, days to market. Quiet numbers, tracked relentlessly, published as we go.
What we learn becomes a public set of operating notes — for growers, students, and partners who would like to build their own version, somewhere else.
Khopoli, in the
Sahyadri view-corridor.
Roughly three hours from Mumbai, in a belt of the Western Ghats with 2,500–3,500 mm of annual rainfall, basalt-derived lateritic soils, and a temperate microclimate carved out by elevation.
