Search intent should land on a useful answer, not a dead end.
GospodApp articles answer real gardening questions, then move people toward diagnose pages and the Android app when they need a likely cause or a clearer next step.
Start with a guide
Use articles when you want more context about a symptom, crop, pest, or seasonal task.
Move into a diagnose page
Use a pain page when you want faster symptom triage before you open the app.
Open the app when the plant is right there
The install path stays obvious because guides should support conversion, not distract from it.
Good starting points from the article library.
Growing tomatoes in the garden: a complete guide for beginners
Learn how to grow tomatoes in the garden: planting, watering, potting, fertilizing and disease prevention. Practical guide to healthy and tasty tomatoes.
Read the guideGrowing peppers in the garden: planting, watering and care
Practical guide to growing peppers in the garden: when to plant, how to water, how to care for them and what mistakes to avoid for a good harvest.
Read the guideGrowing cucumbers in the garden: a practical guide to a good harvest
Learn how to grow cucumbers in the garden: sowing, watering, vertical support, common diseases and tips for a bountiful harvest.
Read the guideCare of strawberries in the garden: watering, mulching and clean harvesting
Practical guide to caring for strawberries in the garden: how to water them, how to mulch them and what to do to have clean and tasty fruit.
Read the guideSymptom pages that connect search traffic to the app.
Yellow leaves on a plant? Start by narrowing down the likely cause.
Yellowing is a symptom, not a diagnosis. The fastest way forward is to check where the yellow leaves appear, how fast the change happened, and whether the root zone is stressed.
Compare symptoms Brown tipsBrown leaf tips usually mean stress around water, salts, or air, not one single disease.
Start by looking at the watering pattern and the root zone. Brown tips are often the plant showing repeated stress before the rest of the leaf fails.
Compare symptoms Drooping leavesA drooping plant is asking for attention, but not always for more water.
Leaf droop can come from thirst, heat, root stress, transplant shock, or overwatering. The next move depends on what the soil and stems are doing too.
Compare symptoms Black spotsBlack spots usually need closer inspection before you decide whether it is fungal, mechanical, or just old tissue breaking down.
The pattern matters: scattered spots, ringed lesions, quick spread after rain, or blackening tied to the leaf edge all point to different causes.
Compare symptoms White powderA white powdery layer is one of the easier symptoms to spot, but the right response still depends on plant type, spread, and conditions.
What matters first is whether the white layer wipes off, how fast it is spreading, and whether the plant is crowded, humid, or already stressed.
Compare symptoms AphidsAphids often cluster on new growth, flower stems, and the undersides of softer leaves. The first useful step is to see how localized the problem still is.
Acting early helps. Once aphids multiply and distort new growth, plants lose energy and secondary problems follow more easily.
Compare symptomsRead for context. Open the app for the real plant.
Articles help with understanding. GospodApp helps when you want to scan the plant you have right now and get a likely cause plus a practical next move.