Baselines by Hydrozone
Set hydrozone baselines, track actual use, and act on the exceptions that matter.
Pine Landscaping develops water budgeting as an operating framework for landscape performance, not just a reporting exercise. Each budget is connected to hydrozones, plant demand, exposure, irrigation equipment, seasonal programs, and site conditions so managers can understand what normal water use should look like before exceptions appear.
A water budget is your contract with the landscape. We establish baselines by hydrozone and exposure, then translate them into station-level runtimes that reflect actual hydraulics, not generic tables. Flow meters and pressure sensors at key nodes allow the system to prove delivery and expose silent failures; stuck valves, pinhole leaks, broken laterals.
We configure alarms for meaningful thresholds (variance to budget, abnormal runtimes, pressure drops) and suppress noise that would otherwise train teams to ignore alerts. The outcome is a dashboard that shows managers what to act on and technicians where to go first.
Monitoring becomes even more valuable across seasons. We deliver monthly variance reports, highlight the highest-impact exceptions, and recommend tune-ups: nozzle changes, station regrouping, or schedule shifts to match canopy growth and shade changes. For multi-site portfolios, we implement a simple Irrigation Performance Index that lets owners compare properties without punishing those with harsher climates. Data is retained according to policy, and access is role-based so PDPL expectations are met while still empowering the field. With a budget, a meter, and a routine, savings persist long after the ribbon cutting.
This monitoring process helps owners and facility teams move from reactive troubleshooting to planned performance management. By reviewing trends, alarms, and variance reports regularly, irrigation teams can identify waste, protect plant health, and prioritize field actions with clearer evidence.






