Thank you, Rick, and good morning, everyone. As Rick said, our results in the second quarter were aligned with our outlook as our talented team continued the disciplined execution of our strategic priorities. Consolidated net sales for the quarter were $1.35 billion, up slightly from our record in Q2 last year. Reported EPS was $1.38 per diluted share, compared to $1.59 in the second quarter of last year. Adjusted EPS was $1.40 per diluted share, down as expected from $1.58. Now to the segment results. Professional segment net sales for the second quarter were just over $1 million, down 5.9% year-over-year. This decrease was primarily driven by lower shipments of zero-turn mowers, which was expected given the elevated field inventories heading into the spring selling season. This was partially offset by higher shipments of underground and specialty construction equipment and golf and ground products as we address the elevated order backlog for these businesses. Professional segment earnings for the second quarter were $190.7 million compared to $227.5 million last year. When expressed as a percentage of net sales, earnings for the segment were 19% compared to 21.3% last year. The change in profitability was expected and primarily due to lower net sales volume as field inventory levels as zero-turn mowers normalize and higher material and manufacturing costs as we continue to adjust production to demand. This was partially offset by productivity improvements. Residential segment net sales for the second quarter were $335.6 million, up 26.3% compared to last year. The increase was primarily driven by higher shipments of product to our mass channel, which was partially offset by lower shipments to our dealer channel as we work to normalize field inventory levels. Residential segment earnings for the quarter were $36.1 million, up from $22.7 million last year. When expressed as a percentage of net sales, earnings for the segment were 10.8%, up from 8.6% last year. The year-over-year increase was largely due to net sales leverage and productivity improvements. This was partially offset by product mix and higher material and manufacturing costs. Turning to our operating results. Our reported and adjusted gross margin were both 33.6% for the quarter. This compares to 35.8% for both in the same period last year. The decrease was primarily due to unfavorable segment mix given the exceptional residential segment growth, product mix within residential and higher material and manufacturing costs. This was partially offset by productivity improvements. SG&A expense as a percentage of net sales for the quarter was 19.7% compared to 19.5% in the same period last year. The increase was primarily driven by slightly higher corporate expenses, mostly offset by lower marketing costs. Operating earnings as a percentage of net sales for the quarter were 13.9% and on an adjusted basis were 14.2%. These compare to 16.3% on both a reported and adjusted basis in the same period last year. Interest expense for the quarter was $16.7 million, up $2 million from last year. The increase was primarily due to higher average outstanding borrowings and higher average interest rates. The reported effective tax rate for the second quarter was 19.2% compared with 20.6% a year ago. The adjusted effective tax rate for the second quarter was 19.8%, compared with 21.1%. The decrease for both was primarily due to a more favorable geographic mix of earnings. Turning to our balance sheet. Accounts receivable were $623.1 million, up 34.9% from a year ago, primarily driven by increased shipments to our mass channel for the spring selling season as well as payment terms to that channel. This increase was as expected given our new strategic partnership with Lowe's. As a reminder, our accounts receivable balance consists of sales to our mass channel partners, irrigation customers and many of our international dealers and distributors. The majority of our US independent dealers and distributors take advantage of inventory floor plan financing programs to fund their purchases as customary in our industry. We offer programs with third-party financial institutions as well as through our Red Iron joint venture with Huntington Bank. Red iron offers financing for the majority of our domestic dealers and distributors of lawn care, snow and ice management and golf and ground solutions as well as Toro-branded specialty construction products. Additionally, there are other third-party institutions that provide inventory financing for a small portion of those dealers and distributors, some international channel partners as well as the majority of our Ditch Witch underground construction distribution partners. As is typical for these types of financing programs, the large majority of floor plan interest payments to Red Iron and our other inventory financing partners are funded by The Toro Company as the OEM. These payments are reflected in our net sales results and are always considered when we provide outlook commentary. From the dealer or distributor perspective, Red Iron financing operates similar to a third-party bank program. From our perspective, the Toro Company's 45% noncontrolling ownership stake in the Red Iron JV allows us to recoup a portion of our floor planning costs. In accordance with GAAP, our share of JV income is reported within the other income line of our income statement. Now back to the balance sheet. Inventory at the end of Q2 was $1.11 billion, down 2% compared to last year and slightly lower sequentially from last quarter. The decrease was driven by lower residential segment finished goods balances due to increased shipments to our mass channel. This was partially offset by higher balances of snow and ice management products as expected, given the lack of snowfall this past winter. Accounts payable were $512.4 million, relatively flat compared to a year ago. Year-to-date free cash flow was $95.6 million, an improvement of almost $100 million compared to last year. We are making progress on normalizing working capital and are emerging from our peak needs season. As a reminder, the majority of our operating cash flow is typically generated in the second half of our fiscal year based on seasonal flow, and we expect that same cadence this year. For the full year, we continue to expect a free cash flow conversion rate of about 100% based on reported net income aligned with our 10-year historical average conversion rate. Importantly, our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter within our gross debt-to-EBITDA leverage ratio target of between 1 time to 2 times. This, along with our investment-grade credit ratings, provides the financial flexibility to fund investments that drive long-term sustainable growth. Our disciplined approach to capital allocation remains unchanged, with our first priority to make strategic investments in our business to drive long-term profitable growth, both organically and through acquisitions. We are acting on this priority with our plan to fund $125 million in capital expenditures during fiscal 2024 to support new product investments, advanced manufacturing technologies and capacity for growth. Our next priority is to return capital to shareholders, both through our regular dividend and share repurchases. We have consistently grown our dividend payout over time as our earnings have grown which reinforces our conviction in our strong and sustainable growth and future cash flows. Year-over-year, we have increased our dividend by 6%. With respect to share repurchases, our approach has been to fund repurchases with excess free cash flow while maintaining our leverage goals. To that end, with the improvement in cash flow this quarter, we reduced our outstanding revolver borrowings by $170 million and spent $10 million to repurchase shares. We plan to continue ramping up share repurchases in the second half of the fiscal year, as we have strong conviction about our future growth opportunities. Looking ahead to the remainder of the fiscal year. In our Professional segment, we continue to expect benefits from the sustained strength in demand and substantial order backlogs for underground construction products and golf and ground equipment. For these businesses, field inventory levels remain lower than ideal. We made slight progress in reducing open orders during the second quarter, driven by the actions we've taken to drive increased output. On a total company basis, our order backlog remains elevated, and with our progress in reducing lead times, backlog is down slightly from the $1.97 billion balance at fiscal 2023 year-end and lower on a year-over-year basis. In our residential segment, we continue to expect benefits from the strength in our mass channel. For both segments, we are focused on normalizing dealer field inventories of lawn care solutions and snow and ice management products. and have considered the expected impacts of this focus in our guidance. We are also assuming normal seasonal weather patterns for the second half of our fiscal year, including temperature and moisture levels. With this backdrop and based on our first half performance and current visibility, we are reaffirming the full year net sales and adjusted diluted EPS guidance we shared on our last earnings call. We continue to expect low single-digit total company net sales growth and expect higher shipments of lawn care solutions to our mass channel to offset a reduction in preseason shipments of snow and ice management products. For the professional segment, we continue to expect net sales growth at a rate slightly lower than the total company average. For the residential segment, we expect net sales to grow at a rate significantly higher than the total company average. Looking at profitability. We now expect adjusted gross margin and adjusted operating earnings as a percentage of net sales to be similar to last year, a reflection of the expected change in product mix with lower snow shipments. Turning to our segments. We continue to expect both the professional and residential segment earnings margins to be higher than last year. For the professional segment margins, we also expect a slight improvement over last year's margin, exclusive of impairment charges. For the other activities category, we continue to expect higher expense compared to fiscal 2023. This is a result of our expectations for a return to more normal incentive compensation. For the second half of the year, we expect a quarterly run rate similar to Q1. With that, we continue to expect full year adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $4.25 to $4.35. Additionally, for the full year, we continue to expect depreciation and amortization of about $120 million to $130 million and an adjusted effective tax rate of about 21%. For interest expense, we now expect about $60 million for the full year. Moving to the third quarter of fiscal 2024. We anticipate total company net sales to be up high teens year-over-year. For the professional segment, we expect net sales to be up high single-digits to low teens. For the residential segment, we expect substantial year-over-year growth. Moving to profitability. For the third quarter, we anticipate total company adjusted operating margin to be higher than the same period last year. We also expect the professional segment earnings margin to be higher on a year-over-year basis and similar sequentially to our second quarter fiscal 2024 result. We expect the residential segment earnings margin to be much higher year-over-year and lower sequentially from the second quarter. Overall, we expect our third quarter fiscal 2024 adjusted diluted EPS to be meaningfully higher than last year and slightly higher than the Q3 record $1.19 we achieved in fiscal 2022. We continue to operate with discipline and build our business for long-term profitable growth. Our multiyear productivity initiative, AMP, is gaining momentum, and we are confident in our ability to drive significant benefits and opportunities, including profitability improvements. With that, I'll turn the call back to Rick.