Stymie

Golf Weather Forecast

Conditions that actually matter on the course — wind impact (including gusts), dew point comfort, feels-like temperature, and a 5-day outlook framed for tee-time decisions. Pick your day, get the numbers.

Forecast covers today through Wed, Jul 8. Look up a different ZIP →

Forecast for

River Oaks Country Club

Houston, TX

View course page →
Stymie
Stymie
Golf Weather
Unbearable
Saturday, July 4
Right now
River Oaks Country Club
Houston, TX
☀️
81°
Clear · feels 88°
Wind
2 mph SSW
Calm — pick the club you'd hit on a calm range.
Dew point
77° · Unbearable
Heavy, oppressive air. Hands and grips slip, the ball flies shorter through dense humid air, and dehydration risk is real. Pre-hydrate, towel often, expect to lose a club of carry.
Gusts
5 mph peak · Low
Gusts roughly match the sustained wind — play to the average.
Driver impact
−2 into / +1 down
Yards on a 250-yd driver. Crosswind drifts the ball ~0 yds on a 150-yd shot.
stymie.golf/weather
Wind · Dew Point · Gusts · Tee-time breakdown
clear_day

Right now

81°F

Clear · feels 88°

Wind

2 mph

from SSW · g5

Humidity

88%

Dew point

77°

Unbearable

Driver impact

sports_golf
2into·+1down

Yards on a 250-yd driver. Crosswind drifts ~0 yds on a 150-yd shot.

2 mph SSW

Grip

Slippery

Dew point 77°

Towel every shot — grips will be wet by hole 4. Bring two gloves.

Gust risk

Low

5 mph peak

Gusts roughly match the sustained wind — play to the average.

Comfort

Warm

Feels 88°

Hydrate every couple holes. Late-round fatigue if you skip it.

Tee-time breakdown

Conditions through Saturday, July 4 — pick the tee window that fits.

Morning

6 AM – 11 AM

clear_day

83° · feels 87°

Clear

Wind
4 mph SW
Gusts
8 mph
Humidity
80%
Dew point
76°

Early afternoon

11 AM – 2 PM

clear_day

93° · feels 96°

Clear

Wind
6 mph SSW
Gusts
5 mph
Humidity
41%
Dew point
66°

Late afternoon

2 PM – 6 PM

cloud

93° · feels 92°

Clouds

Wind
6 mph S
Gusts
3 mph
Humidity
31%
Dew point
58°
air

Wind — Calm

2 mph from SSW

Negligible. Pick the club you'd hit on a calm range.

storm

Gusts — Low

5 mph peak (3 above sustained)

Gusts roughly match the sustained wind — play to the average.

77°

Dew point — Unbearable

Heavy, oppressive air. Hands and grips slip, the ball flies shorter through dense humid air, and dehydration risk is real. Pre-hydrate, towel often, expect to lose a club of carry.

3-day outlook

Today

clear_day

93° / 80°

Clear

Wind
7 mph SSW
Gusts
17 mph
Feels like
92°
Dew point
71°
Tee-time details →

Tomorrow

cloud

95° / 78°

Clouds

Wind
7 mph SSW
Gusts
16 mph
Feels like
90°
Dew point
71°
Tee-time details →

Mon, Jul 6

cloud

97° / 80°

Clouds

Wind
7 mph S
Gusts
14 mph
Feels like
93°
Dew point
73°
Tee-time details →

Browse by state

Per-state golf weather hubs with the top golf cities and seasonal context — when each region plays best, what dew points to expect, altitude effects.

Dew point comfort scale

Dew point — not humidity — is the cleanest single number for how oppressive the air feels. A 90% humidity day at 50°F feels great; the same humidity at 80°F is a sauna. Dew point captures that directly.

Below 50

Perfect

Dry, crisp air. Ball carries well, grips stay tacky, sweat-free 18.

50 – 59

Comfortable

Pleasant playing conditions. Most amateurs play their best in this band.

60 – 69

Humid

Sticky, noticeably warm. Grip slip becomes a factor late in the round.

70+

Unbearable

Heavy oppressive air. Ball flies shorter, hydration is critical.

Golf weather — frequently asked

How far ahead can I check golf weather?

Stymie pulls a 5-day forecast — today plus the next 4 days. For dates beyond that, swing back closer to your tee time and the page will fill in. Forecast accuracy is also strongest 0–3 days out; days 4–5 are useful for trends but the actual numbers can shift.

What dew point is comfortable for golf?

Anything below 60°F is comfortable. Below 50°F is ideal — dry air, grips stay tacky, ball carries normal distance. The 60–70°F range is humid; 70°F+ is oppressive: hands slip, the ball flies shorter through dense moisture-laden air, and dehydration risk climbs fast.

How does wind affect a golf shot?

A common caddie heuristic: each 1 mph of headwind costs roughly 1 yard of carry on a driver, and each 1 mph of tailwind adds about 0.5 yards. So a 15 mph headwind is roughly 15 yards short — about one club. Crosswinds don't shorten the shot much but push the ball sideways; aim 1 yard upwind for every 5 mph of crosswind on a 150-yard shot.

Are gusts worse than steady wind?

Yes. A steady 15 mph wind is predictable — pick your club, commit, swing. A 10 mph wind with 25 mph gusts is much harder because the gust can hit at the wrong moment in the swing or while the ball is in flight. When gusts are more than ~50% above sustained wind, club up and swing smoother instead of harder.

Does humidity make the ball go shorter?

Yes, but not by as much as people think. High humidity makes air slightly less dense, which actually means the ball flies *farther* by 1–2 yards per 50% humidity increase at constant temperature. The bigger humidity effect is on the player: grip slip and dehydration both eat into ball-striking quality, which is what most golfers feel as "the ball not going anywhere".

Is cold weather bad for golf?

The ball loses about 1 yard of carry for every 10°F below 70°F. At 40°F a 250-yard driver becomes ~228 yards. Cold also stiffens the body and the ball core — both reduce smash factor. Warm balls in your pocket between shots help marginally.

What temperature is best for golf?

The 65–80°F band is the sweet spot. Above 85°F with humidity over 60% the ball flies a touch shorter and the player tires faster; below 60°F you start losing carry on every club. The "shoot your number" range is 70–80°F with dew point under 60°F and wind under 10 mph.

What's the difference between feels-like and actual temperature?

Feels-like temperature factors humidity (in heat) and wind chill (in cold) on top of the air temperature. For golf, feels-like is more useful than the raw number — a 90°F day with 75% humidity feels closer to 100°F to your body, which dictates hydration and pacing. A 50°F day with 15 mph wind feels more like 40°F, which dictates layering and warm-up.