You can access your plots and their data via "My farm".
Your plots are only accessible to members of your farm or to members of the organization managing your network.
How to view my plots?
This is the default screen of the application.
This map displays all the farm’s plots. If several are located within a small area, they are grouped into sub-sets (clusters).
In Weenat, plots are represented by circles. On the web version, the shape of the plots is visible.
An isolated plot displays the value of the selected metric (for this single plot).
Example:
- 1.8 mm of rainfall
A group of plots (a cluster) displays the median value of the plots in the cluster as well as the number of plots in the group.
Example:
- 11.2 mm of rainfall
- this is the median value for this group of 22 plots
Plot page
By clicking on a circle, you access the plot page (the domain (weather, irrigation, frost) and the number of widgets may vary depending on the plot type):
On a plot you can:
- link multiple sensors to the same plot (ideal in the case of tensiometers, we always recommend 6 per plot) — it is a kind of "sensor container" if you prefer. (see [LINK])
- benefit from integrations with other tools (DSTs, third-party platforms...)
- associate and monitor a crop (phenological stages based on your observation)
- add, reorder and remove widgets (according to your needs, your profession, the sensors linked to the plot, your context, your crop...) (see [LINK])
- record irrigation events
- define various parameters such as: environment type (open field or greenhouse, irrigation type, soil texture)
- in the case of plots linked to irrigation sensors (tensiometers, capacitive probes, fertigation probes), view your irrigation data (see [LINK])
And, as with sensors, it also allows you to:
- benefit from weather forecasts at its location (see [LINK])
- access the history of each data point available on the plot
- export the history of each data point available on the plot (see [LINK])
Configuration panel
In the configuration panel, you will find information about your plot:
- plot name
- plot shape and geolocation (and position of sensors linked to the plot)
- creation date
- associated crop and monitoring of phenological stages
- list of linked sensors (and any ongoing events)
- technical parameters (open field / greenhouse, irrigation type, soil texture)
- list of enabled integrations
- alerts linked to the plot (see [LINK])
- add to favorites, archive or delete