Your drivers tap three buttons per load — gloves on, no typing, works with no signal. Come March, the farm records and the state paperwork are a review and a button, not a lost weekend.
One tap per load — source pit, field, done. Offline-first: logs live on the phone and sync when you hit coverage. Big buttons that work with gloves on.
Field-by-field application records — dates, gallons, acres, rate, method — formatted and ready to hand over, in the 21-day format where your state requires it.
Your annual paperwork drafted straight from the season's loads. You review it, you sign it, you file it — ManureLog never files anything on your behalf.
Invoices matched to the loads actually hauled, QuickBooks export, and every record retained for the full period your state requires.
ManureLog is in development for the 2026 fall season, and it's being built around five real operations — not a boardroom's guess. The founding five get the first season at half the final price, veto power on the feature list, and the first call when it's ready to run.
When the five slots are gone, they're gone. If you want one, call or email — it's a ten-minute conversation.
I'm John Park, a software developer in California. I don't come from the farm side, and I'm not pretending to. I come from the software side — where every other industry got its paperwork automated years ago, while custom applicators were left with clipboards and a heavier rulebook.
So I'm building this with operators, not at them. Every screen gets designed around how real outfits in Iowa, Wisconsin, and New York actually run — which is exactly why the founding five get the steering wheel.
A one-page printable load sheet matching Iowa commercial applicator record requirements (567 IAC 65.111) — load tally, totals, analysis, retention notes. No sign-up, no strings. Print a stack for every truck.
Best times to reach me: weekday mornings and evenings, Central time. If I don't pick up, leave a message — I return every call. If you got here from a call or an email you didn't want, say "no thanks" once and you'll never hear from me again.