
Weather is the one variable you can’t control — and the one most likely to test your tournament. Colorado weather especially can swing from sunshine to a thunderstorm in an afternoon. But an event with a real weather plan rolls with it, while one without scrambles. As the founder of Colorado Under Par, I’ve learned that the organizers who decide in advance what they’ll do when the sky turns are the ones who keep their players safe, comfortable, and happy no matter what. Here’s how to build that plan. (For weather as a safety emergency — lightning, evacuation — see our golf tournament safety guide, which goes deeper on that side.)
The worst time to figure out your rain plan is during the rain. Sort it out weeks ahead:
Indecision is what turns weather into chaos. Designate one person with the authority to call delays, resumptions, and cancellations — and a clear point of contact at the course, who knows their property and their own weather protocols. Set a “decision deadline” (e.g., a go/no-go call by a certain hour the morning of) so players, vendors, and the course aren’t left hanging. Keep an eye on the forecast in the days before and the radar on the day, and make the call decisively. Players respect a clear, early decision far more than a wishy-washy one.
Weather isn’t always an emergency — often it’s just discomfort to manage. Make sure your event has accessible covered space (the clubhouse, a pavilion, tents) where players can wait out a delay or escape the elements. For heat, that means shade, hydration stations, and maybe cooling towels; for cold or rain, a warm, dry place to gather. When the weather turns, a comfortable place to wait keeps morale up and turns a delay into a social break rather than a miserable one.
A weather plan only works if players know it. Before the event, tell registrants what happens in bad weather — whether there’s a rain date, what the delay/cancellation policy is, and (importantly) your refund or rain-check policy, so there are no disputes later. On the day, keep the field updated in real time through whatever channel reaches everyone fast. Players will forgive the weather; they won’t forgive being left uninformed in a parking lot. (Our communication guide covers setting up that fast, reach-everyone channel.)
You can’t control the weather, but you can control how ready you are for it. Decide your delay/cancel thresholds and backup plans in advance, put one person in charge of the call, provide shelter and comfort, and communicate the plan — including refunds — clearly. Do that, and a rainy forecast becomes a manageable challenge instead of the thing that derails your event.
When you’re ready to run your next one, you can list your golf tournament free on Colorado Under Par and reach players across the state.
Best regards,
Andrew Mueller, Founder, Colorado Under Par
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