BaOmBaKaTaRa EdOn

REGENERATIVE SOil THERAPY PROGRAM

Our Mission
To procure, restore, and cultivate sustainable soil, delivering farm-to-table experiences that are:
- Intellectually stimulating – Bridging soel and genetic memory.
- Environmentally regenerative – adapting to the transition from consumer to producer.
- Climate-smart – Innovating for self-sustaining SolRa production.
We operate at international standards, but our roots remain local. For our member-clients, this is more than food & soel vibe security—it’s stewardship. Through hands-on collaboration, we nurture not just the earth, but a sense of purpose for self and soul.
Our Vision
To pioneer the Stewardian economy – where eco-farm timeshares merge member-funded labor, lodging, and legacy into one adaptable cultivation system.
At BakaBean, we recognize the soel purpose alienation robots and algorithms will cause. Our members choose delete the vacation, travel to occupy serving the soil with their hands, reclaiming both livelihood and soul-purpose.
We offer more than self investment – we provide the ultimate commodity: the right to become a self-generating Steward within a living, breathing eco-omstem. This is the future of meaningful existence, and it must be secured today.
BaKaBean BaKaEE Adaptable Cultivation Experience is the sound solution for human evolution through:
- Eco-systemic collapse
- Social-economic rupture
- Virtual-world alienation(where robots/algorithms reign)
- Global unrest(pandemics, wars, inflation)
Our answer: Solar-centralized membership sustainability, integrated with Blockchain.
Our Pillars
- Soil & NOURISHMENT
We procured farmable property to cultivate:
Coffee| Orchard crops| Medicinal herbs | Jamaican staple eats
→ Delivering a self-farm-to-table lifestyle where members eat what they steward. - SOEL THERAPY
Founded through lived autism experience, we offer:
🎵 Sound therapy| Counselling| Sensory-motor development
→ Cultivating sense of self/others in a true Stewardian environment. - WEB3 ECOSYSTEM
Virtual NFT farms(consumable yields)
💻 Tokenized community(funds real development)
→ Bridging digital and physical survival.
MEMBERS GROW A COMMUNITY TREE

Mr. Chaplin
Born in Toronto to Jamaican parents; returned to Jamaica to homestead with his son.
2 decades of hands-on experience in regenerative farming, livestock, Fungi and herbs

Jr. Chaplin (autism /hemophilia adult
Professional welder and farmer; mentors neurodivergent members through agricultural & soel expression therapy.

The Family Legacy
From a family of Champion farmers is reviving to transfer traditional growing/processing methods on-site.

BAKABEAN: JAMAICA’S UNCOMPROMISED BOUNTY
This isn’t “agricultural export.”
This is sovereignty grown from soil – ackee, breadfruit and healing leaves as our weapons.
Imagine this:
You invest in crops that matter – not Wall Street paper, but eco-Omstem that feed your soel interest.
You enable the medicinal leaves your Onsenders (ancestors) trusted, now sought globally as “medicine.”
You harvest honey from bees that still thrive on ancient flowing plants.
This is the Unbroken Chain:
- No lab-made “superfoods
- No dying bee hives
- No sterile packaging
The Pact:
- Your money plants trees, not digits
- Your hands learn preservation, not scrolling
- Your mouth tastes honey that remembers you

Target Members for Private StemRadian Network
1. Conscious Parents
For families rewriting their children’s future – one seed at a time.”

Why They Join:
Teach kids food sovereignty through hands-on cultivation
Access to untainted produce (zero corporate supply chains)
Perks: Family work-stays, child-focused agro-education
2. Next-Gen Cooks & Chefs
“Where kitchen meets cultivation – your ingredients grow where you sleep.”

Why They Join:
Hyper-local sourcing for Michelin-quality Jamaican cocoa, coffee, breadfruit
Members-only harvest swaps (trade your dishes for our crops)
Perks: Private chef residencies, fermentation workshops
3. Healing Seekers
“Where soil medicine meets chronic illness reversal.”
Why They Join:

personally grown and sourced leaf, herbs and other island grown super foods
Fresh anti-inflammatory crops (soursop, moringa, cerasee)
Prescription-to-plate programs with herbalists
Perks: Detox retreats, medicinal garden plots
4. Micro-Business Owners
“For those who’d rather dig than deal.”

Why They Join:
B2B crop contracts (your café sources our coffee)
Tool libraries for small-scale farming
Perks: Bulk harvest discounts, branding on “Stewardian-Grown” labels
5. Burnout Escapees
“The antidote to AI alienation: sweat equity with ocean views.”

Why They Join:
Digital detox through structured farm work
Earn stays by building huts/tending crops
Perks: Priority access to future DAO governance
6. Displaced Bee Stewards
“For keepers who’ve lost hives – and refuse to let the knowledge die.”
Why They Join:
Rescue Jamaican genetics – Sustain one of the last healthy bee populations in the Americas
Learn adaptive techniques – Master chemical-free beekeeping for collapsing ecosystems
Earn through pollination – Trade hive maintenance for lodging/crop shares

Perks:
“Hive Legacy” program – Name and track your adopted colony (with survival metrics)
First rights to queen bees – Repopulate your home region with resilient stock
DAO voting power – Influence future pollinator projects
Regulars and Retirees
If you are a regular traveller to Jamaica or wish to return home part time during the year contributing to the erection of a home in exchange for time-shared access is the solution. BaKaBean EdOn Vacations have become Occupations for your Soel via soil.

For frequent Jamaica travelors or returnees seeking part-time roots:
• Build a home in exchange for seasonal access
• Active membership in our Stewardian village
• Shared homestead activities (planting, building, preserving)
• Guaranteed food security from community harvests
Autism & Mental Health Inclusion
The founder and Son are examples of using sound to succeed neurological abnormality spectrum disorders such as autism. Chaplin recognizing that autism is about a battle between site vs senses over operating the brain. Providing environments were individuals are forced to become aware of their own progress through interactions with their environment to sustain themselves is the key to overcoming Pinocchio becoming a real soul. Forcing individuals that are severed from genetic memory to learn and navigate a symbolic obstruct the remedy in the process of finding their sound self.
A sound-based sanctuary for neurological diversity
• Founder & son’s lived experience overcoming sensory battles
• Environments that reawaken genetic memory through:
- Hands-on survival tasks (fire-making, shelter-building)
- Sound therapy integration (rhythm, vibration, nature frequencies)
• “Pinocchio to Real Soul” progress tracking: - Daily sensory-grounding practices
- Non-verbal communication workshops
Support Services:
• Parent-to-parent mentorship circles
• Life skills intensives:
- Tool-handling safety
- Wild edible identification
Emotional regulation through craft (weaving, carpentry)
• Respite stays for caregivers
• Neurodivergent-led farming teams
Join BaKaBean Support a Sound Solution
THE BAKABEAN STORY – SOEL TO SOIL
This is rewilding the human spirit through dirt, sweat, and soel fire.
Imagine this:
- You finance your future homestead, then build it with your own hands alongside a crew of stewards – masons, farmers, craftsmen, and dreamers.
- You learn to plant not just seeds, but legacy – coffee, breadfruit, medicinal roots – using methods older than banks, older than the internet.
- You sleep in an Earth-Ship you helped erect, made from Jamaica’s earth, cooled by its breeze, powered by its sun.
- You leave with storied hands, a full Soel, and a mind Boosted – because you didn’t just visit the source soil, you communed with it.
This is the SoEl-to-Soil Pact:
- No sterile “eco-resorts” – only living, breathing Steward Compounds.
- No token labor – you grind, you learn, you leave transformed.
- No dead contracts – your sweat equity is your ownership.
The Future We’re Building:
A network of tiny Earth-Ship hamlets across Jamaica, where:
- Members timeshare labor & lodging – a rotating tribe of builders, growers, and healers.
- Neurodivergent stewards lead sound therapy sessions under the stars.
- Blockchain tracks not just funds, but growth – your digital deed evolves with your physical harvest.
This isn’t a trend. It’s a takeover.
The virtual world left us empty. The answer isn’t to retreat – it’s to dig in.

THE GAME WHERE TOKENS MAINTAIN A SOUND GRID
This isn’t crypto play money.
This is survival arithmetic – digital credits that build real soil.
How It Works:
Earn credit tokens for discounts by:
- Buying, selling, providing service to our eco-omstem
- Monitoring crops via smart sensors (your surveillance feeds the farm)
- Simulating harvest cycles and other homestead actives
- Supporting associated business services
- Future nft rewards royalties
No Illusions:
“Crypto” without real utility
“Play-to-earn” that buys nothing real
Digital serfdom
Only This:
- A closed loop where every token tracks to soil
- Surveillance that serves the watched
- Game mechanics that train real skills
Final Level:
“When their metaverse collapses, our blockchain will still be growing food.”

OPERATING SELF IN HIGHEST VIBRATION IS ABOUT THE SOUNDS YOU SOW
BaKa translates to Sound/tethered Soel. To Exercise the SoEl is to maintain soil. Mental health is your etheric compass, orientating to the SaOn (sun) sustains a sound mind.
The foundation of BaKaBean Bakaee brand is built on servicing our private members an adaptable cultivating experience transcending the vacation to working on building your higher-self time.
We bridge ancient wisdom and regenerative science to combat:
Virtual-world alienation
Eco-anxiety
Sensory disconnection
Through:
SoEl Therapy – Autism-informed sound healing fused with agricultural rhythms
Stewardian Cultivation – Member-built earthships growing coffee, medicinal herbs & legacy
Blockchain-Backed Soil – Where Web3 tokens track real harvests, not speculation
This isn’t farming as charity – it’s your sovereign toolkit for:
Rewilding nervous systems through dirt and decibels
Converting screen fatigue into soil fertility
Trading algorithmic enslavement for earth-literate freedom

Growing Plans
Jamaica’s climate is uniquely suited for growing a wide variety of crops, and with access to river water, BaOmBaKaTaRa EdOn has the ability to sustain them effectively. The plan is to begin with grafted using clippings from strong, healthy specimens as well as starting from seed that take approximately 3 years to mature . This approach not only accelerates the fruiting process but also ensures the selection of high-quality genetics, setting the foundation for a productive and resilient orchard.
Orchard crop farming in Jamaica has proven to be a lucrative investment, with ackee, Soursop, breadfruit, pear (avocado), and mango leading as top exports to markets like Canada. Guava, Coconut are established on the property, with the land lower near the river Dasheen will be a prime crop we will seek to fill a gap in the market caused by water access.
Here is a detailed look at tropical and Jamaican crops that require consistently moist soil to truly thrive.
🥭 Fruits
| Fruit | Water Requirement | Notes for Jamaica |
|---|---|---|
| Banana & Plantain | 1200–2500 mm/year | Exceptionally water-loving; drought stress severely impacts fruit yield and quality |
| Breadfruit | 1500–2500 mm/year | Requires consistent moisture, especially when young, and suffers during extended dry periods. |
| Papaya | 1000–1900 mm/year | Drought-sensitive; moisture stress during flowering causes flower/fruit drop. |
| Coconut | High, especially in early stages | Important for Jamaica; early growth requires consistent moisture. |
| Sugar Cane | 1500–2500 mm/year | Water-intensive; yields suffer without adequate rainfall or irrigation-. |
| Starfruit | 1000–2000 mm/year | Thrives in well-distributed rainfall; sensitive to water stress, which leads to fruit drop. |
| Jackfruit | High | A high water-requiring fruit crop, but well-drained soil is essential for root health |
| Passion Fruit | 1000–1500 mm/year | Benefits from alternating wet/dry seasons; consistent moisture is key for healthy vines |
| Watermelon | High (80-100% water content) | High water content reflects its need for consistent irrigation for sweet, juicy fruit-. |
| Water Lemon | Loves year-round ground moisture | This vine, also known as Jamaican Honeysuckle, thrives in humid climates with constant soil moisture–. |
| Guava | 22-30 liters per plant/day | A significant daily water requirement for optimal fruit production and tree health |
| Citrus | 900–1200 mm/year | While moderately drought-tolerant, consistent irrigation is needed for high-quality fruit |
🥬 Vegetables & Leafy Greens
| Vegetable | Water Requirement | Notes for Jamaica |
|---|---|---|
| Watercress | Needs permanently wet soil | A semi-aquatic plant that thrives in saturated soil or shallow water, a key feature in Jamaican cooking-. |
| Taro | ~2500 mm/year | Extremely high demand; often cultivated in flooded or rain-fed plots. Drought can reduce production significantly |
| Callaloo | High | A staple in Jamaica; requires consistent moisture for tender, flavorful leaves-. |
| Lettuce & Leafy Greens | High | These shallow-rooted plants need frequent watering to prevent wilting and bitterness–. |
| Cucumber | High | Needs consistent soil moisture for crisp, well-formed fruits-. |
| Tomato | 600–800 mm/year | Water stress at any stage can cause blossom end rot and reduced yields; irrigation is critical in dry periods-. |
| Sweet Pepper | High | Similar to tomatoes, sweet peppers need regular, even moisture to produce large, flavorful fruits-. |
| Beetroot | High | Requires consistent moisture for uniform root development and sweetness-. |
| Cabbage | 380–500 mm/year | Needs steady water supply for proper head formation; otherwise, heads may crack or bolt-. |
| Onion | ~500,000 gallons per 110-day cycle- | Critical water need, especially during germination and bulbing stages; moisture stress drastically reduces yield-. |
At BaOmBaKaTaRa EdOn , we prioritize crops that mature within 3 to 12 months, ensuring a steady supply of fresh, nutrient-rich foods for our members. Some of these crops, such as peppers, herbs, and leafy greens, thrive in Jamaica’s climate and can yield harvests across three growing seasons, maximizing productivity year-round. Our focus extends beyond fresh produce to value-added goods like peanuts, sea salt, coconut oil, raw honey, cane sugar, and dehydrated fruits—products that not only sustain but also empower members to engage directly with their food. By visiting the homestead, they can participate in processing these staples, whether pressing coconut oil, evaporating sea salt, or drying mangoes, transforming raw ingredients into lasting nourishment while deepening their connection to the land and its rhythms.

While meat production won’t be a focus for export, raising livestock will play a key role in soil revitalization through manure production, while also providing a local, sustainable source of meat for the community.
Adaptive Sound Cultivation Experience
In today’s world, social and economic challenges—such as technological shifts, the rise of online shopping, and the prevalence of counterfeit products—make it difficult for people to source authentic herbs and remedies without the risk of being scammed. BaOmBaKaTaRa addresses this issue by growing as much as possible on-site while also sourcing the highest-quality, trusted products from other reputable growers across the island. This ensures that members receive genuine, effective remedies without compromise.
Beyond just providing food and herbs, BaOmBaKaTaRa EdOn Adaptive Cultivating Sound Experience is about cultivating genetic memory—reconnecting people with the land through hands-on, soul-nourishing experiences. Members will have the opportunity to engage in activities like catching fish in the river, tending to bees for raw honey, harvesting ocean water to make bamboo salt, building eco-shelters, or processing coconuts into oil. These experiences transform consumers into producers, deepening their relationship with nature and fostering self-sufficiency. The true “fruit” of membership lies not just in the harvest but in the wisdom, skills, and connection gained through these practices.

