Tournament week turns a normal agronomy calendar into a logistics puzzle. Every operation — mowing, rolling, spraying, topdressing, setup — has to land in the right window, and a single wet morning can cascade through the whole schedule.
Plan the week, not the morning
A seven-day view shows which days are clean, which are marginal, and which to write off. Front-load the weather-sensitive work — sprays with rainfast needs, applications that can’t get washed off — onto the reliable days, and leave flexible tasks for the gaps.
What drives the week’s shape
- Rain days and rainfast windows — protect every application
- Morning dew and leaf wetness — when greens are dry enough to mow and roll
- Wind — drift risk for sprays, and setup logistics
- Heat and stress — timing growth regulators and syringe cycles
Sequencing with confidence
The goal is to walk into the week knowing the order of operations, not improvising at 5 a.m. DecideWeather lays out each operation’s window across the days ahead as a Go / Caution / Stop recommendation — so the grounds crew sequences tournament prep around the weather instead of reacting to it.