Playing in cold weather
Smart Playing In Cold Weather for High Handicappers
A safer, simpler way for higher-handicap golfers to keep cold-weather golf from becoming a blow-up hole.

Make the miss smaller
High handicappers usually lose strokes in cold-weather golf by asking for too much: a full carry over trouble, a tucked flag, or a curve they do not own. In cold-weather golf, the better move is to make the shot easier before you swing. On winter-feeling days, if the best-case result is birdie but the normal miss is penalty, the plan is too expensive.
Use this winter-yardage filter:
| Situation | Safer choice |
|---|---|
| Trouble short | Take one more club |
| Poor balance | Shorten the swing |
| Narrow target | Aim at the widest landing area |
| Doubt over carry | Lay up to a full wedge |
Club up, calm down
With cold hands in play, most recreational players swing harder when they feel uncertain. In cold-weather golf, that usually means thin strikes, extra spin, or a ball that starts nowhere near the target. Try keeping your hands warm and make a full, unrushed turn. With cold hands in play, a three-quarter swing with one more club will beat the heroic full swing more often than pride wants to admit.
A scoring mindset
On winter-feeling days, your job is to turn bad situations into ordinary scores. When the air is heavy and cold, bogey from a tough place is not a failure; it is often the correct save. When the air is heavy and cold, pick a target that leaves a chip, putt, or simple wedge, and move on before the hole becomes a story.