Philosophy
High in Utah grows Pando: a single quaking aspen that reads as a forest. Some 40,000 trunks share one root system, tens of thousands of years old. The stems live and die. The organism beneath them does not.
DarkGrove is built on that idea. What looks like separate products (liquidity infrastructure, a decompiler, agents) is one organism on a shared root system: the same engineering, the same standards, the same patience. A stem only breaks the surface once the roots can carry it.
So we grow in the dark. The work that matters happens underground, unseen, long before anything is announced. Some stems won’t make it. The grove will.
Our north star: build a root system worth growing from, and let the grove outlast any single tree.
after Pando · Populus tremuloides · Fishlake National Forest, Utah