Memory of the Day
Not every moment needs to be logged.
But one deserves to be remembered.
The Memory of the Day is the moment the nanny — or the parent — chooses to preserve. Not a log. A memory.
What it is
Not a log.
A memory.
The Memory of the Day is a dedicated entry — separate from meals, naps, and activities. It is the moment the nanny chose to lift out of the ordinary flow of the day.
It can be a photo, a short note. Or both. It is not mandatory — but when it is there, it is the first thing the family reads in the Daily Report.
“She looked at her paint-covered hands with absolute wonder. Then laughed.”
“These are the moments parents miss. The ones that happen in the middle of an ordinary Tuesday. Gardspace gives those moments back.”
Why it matters
The nanny witnesses.
The family receives.
A nanny spends more waking hours with a child than most parents can. She witnesses firsts. She sees the small, unrepeatable moments.
The Memory of the Day is the bridge. It is how those moments — the ones that would otherwise disappear — become part of the child's permanent record.
How it works
Simple to capture.
Permanent in the record.
One entry per session
Available once per session. Not a log — a choice. The moment that deserves to be remembered.
Captured in the app
Photos taken directly in Gardspace. Never through the nanny's personal gallery. Private by design.
First in the Daily Report
When the Daily Report is generated, the Memory of the Day appears first — before anything else.
Permanent in the Care Space
The memory stays in the child's record permanently. It belongs to the family. The nanny cannot delete it.
In the record
A year of Memories.
A childhood documented.
Day after day, session after session, the Memories accumulate in the Care Space. They do not disappear.
A record of a childhood. Not curated for social media. Not scattered across personal messaging threads. Structured, private, and entirely theirs.
Start for free“She laughed — really laughed — at the sound of her own voice.”
“First time she reached for a book on her own. Held it upside down. Did not care.”
“She said 'more' — clearly, deliberately. Then looked very pleased with herself.”
“Fell asleep holding the small bear. First time she chose it herself.”
FAQ