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Used to play in anything. 5-10 degrees is the coldest glow round I've played. 10-12 inches is most snow.
Now that I am Grandmasters I generally use the age rule. If the temp is below my age I'm not likely to play. I have already broken the rule this year and played in the 40s but didn't enjoy it much.
I don't like to play in the snow. Too easy to lose discs, even if you see where they went into the snow. Sometimes the snow gets nice and hard on top, then I'll play again. Not sure there's a temp I wouldn't play in.
Ive played in a lot of negitive weaher in WI, I just put a couple layers on and im good to go
We have a Snow-Glow league I run all winter in Colorado. Subzero temps, multiple feet of snow, high plains winds.... In the dark... Every week.
Once the snow starts falling in Colorado, I just snowboard until it melts. Then I get back to throwing.
No bad weather, just bad gear.
where were you at today?.... your age was twice the temperature, and we had waterworks all to ourselves
I'll play in single digits and negative wind chill here in central Illinois. Dressing in layers works great. Been trying to find some decent gloves that can keep fingers warm and still grip well. Sometimes wearing snow gloves and taking it off to throw works. Any ideas what some of you do for hands in the cold?
I'm more likely to go out in certain extremes - oh, it's freezing rain, I'm going to go throw, I bet the baskets will be beautiful covered in ice Oh, it's -100 winchill, I'm going to go throw just to say that I did.
I don't like gloves and always lose them. I have found that hand warmers in the pockets work great.
threw this morning around 37 degrees. broke my star sw on a tree about 100 ft out.:doh: kept on rollin. pocket hand warmers are a must.threw my vibrams pretty much the rest of the round