Precision Agriculture, In Practice
Precision agriculture is management by measurement instead of averages: sensors in every block, decisions from data, and automatic action on what the field actually needs. This is the platform that does it on a real farm.
Measure, Decide, Act
The three steps of precision agriculture, in one closed loop that runs all day.
Measure
Sensors in the soil, the fertigation line, and the air read the conditions in every irrigation zone, continuously and without sampling rounds.
Decide
The cloud turns readings into graphs, trends, and alerts: which block is thirsty, where the feed is drifting from target, and what changed since yesterday.
Act
The controller opens a valve when tension crosses the threshold and closes it when the soil is replenished. Decisions become actions, even when you are not in the field.
The Building Blocks of the Precise Farm
Pick what the farm needs today and expand later. Everything connects to the same controller and the same dashboard.
Soil water tension
Tensiometers in the root zone read how hard the crop works to pull water from the soil, depth by depth. The foundation of irrigating by what the field feels.
The tensiometer rangeFertigation and irrigation water
EC sensors in the fertigation line and source water confirm the concentration reaching the field is the one you planned, and warn of rising salinity.
EC sensors for agricultureClimate and temperature
Temperature and humidity in the greenhouse, the storeroom, and the open field, with alerts when conditions leave the range you set.
Temperature monitoringFull soil monitoring
Moisture, soil temperature, and the wetting profile across every block, on one dashboard with history and trends.
The soil monitoring platformInventory and inputs
Level sensors in silos and tanks track feed and inputs, and alert before you run out.
Silo monitoringThe controller and cloud
The Genesis controller connects any sensor, solar and cellular, and the cloud platform turns the data into alerts, reports, and automation.
The Omni Genesis controllerStart With One Block
Precision agriculture does not require a mega-project. The system is modular: one measurement station in a representative block is an excellent start, and everything you install today keeps serving as you add sensors, blocks, and automation. That is how a small farm gets the same tools as a large one, at its own pace.
Tell us about your farmPrecision agriculture questions, answered
What it means in practice, where to start, and who it fits