Throw those wind charts in the garbage. Here's one example. All wind charts show 7 o'clock quartering wind pushing the bullet slightly low right. I can tell you for sure on several ranges I have shot, including my own club, that bullet is going high right. A club I shot yesterday and on the bench I was on, that 7 o'clock wind pushed the bullet high right, not low right. Those charts show where physics say the bullet should go, and that means nothing in the real world. On another bench on that range yesterday, that bullet may have gone where the chart said it would, but how do you know without sighters?
I gave Hi-NV Shooter several likes on his posts here because he does tell the real story. Topographical features of any given venue is going to make a liar out of that wind rose. Other things such as clouds/no clouds, dew on the grass burning off/no dew on the grass.....or no grass on the field. Humidity level, temperature, etc will also change where that bullet goes no matter what that chart says.
Lee (Hi-NV Shooter) gets it........shoot sighters. They are the only thing you can trust. Learn to read your flags (key word.....flags, not flag), and that takes time and practice. Small angles of wind changes things dramatically. During the course of your time on the clock, don't trust what you think was happening a couple of minutes ago, especially if you shoot one out (loss of points). It's called 'keeping up with the gun'. When you change lines/columns on the card (most really good shooters shoot lines, not columns), shoot more sighters. A lot of times the POI will slightly change as you traverse the target. If your last shot didn't go exactly where you expected, even if it was good shot (no loss of points), stop, and go back to a sighters.
IME wind roses have little to nothing to do with when/how a bullet will hit the center of a target in the real world of competing in a rimfire match. The only thing that tells you, at that place, at that time, is flag/windicator position, confirmed by a sighter.
Scott