Rain rounds separate golfers into two groups: the ones grinding to keep a dry grip with a soaked leather glove, and the ones who came prepared and barely notice. The difference isn't toughness — it's about five pieces of gear and a few habits borrowed from tour caddies. Here's the complete wet-weather playbook.
Rule #1: Stop Playing Leather in the Rain
Standard Cabretta leather gloves are engineered for dry-weather feel. Once saturated, the leather loses its tack, gets heavy, and — the hidden cost — often dries stiff afterward, ruining the glove for future rounds too. Rain gloves flip the physics: their microfiber surfaces actually grip better wet than dry. The wetter the round, the more secure your hold on the club.
That's the entire reason the Rain Rooster exists. Keep a pair in the bag permanently; the day you need it, nothing else works.

The Wet-Weather Checklist
- Rain gloves (pair). Unlike dry gloves, rain gloves are worn on both hands for maximum connection.
- Two towels minimum. One lives under your umbrella's ribs and stays dry for grips and hands; one is the sacrificial towel for clubheads and balls.
- Umbrella discipline. The umbrella's job is protecting your grips, not your hair. Bag under the umbrella, towel hanging inside it, grips pointed away from wind-blown rain.
- Waterproof — not water-resistant — outerwear. A proper rain jacket cut for the golf swing beats any casual waterproof. Test yours: full swings, no restriction at the shoulders.
- Dry-hand routine. Glove on only to hit. Between shots, hands in pockets or under the umbrella.
Adjust the Golf, Not Just the Gear
- Club up and swing smooth. Wet turf kills roll and wet air plays heavy. Take one more club and swing at 80% — balance beats power on slick footing.
- Expect no release on the greens. Putts die faster; hit them firmer and play less break.
- Play for fat contact forgiveness. Wet ground punishes thin precision shots less than fat ones punish you — favor smooth tempo over speed.
- Know the rules. Casual water gives free relief. Learn to spot it and take everything the rulebook offers.
After the Round: Save Your Gear
Post-rain habits determine whether your equipment survives the season. Pull everything out of the bag at home. Towel-dry clubs and grips. Dry your leather gloves flat at room temperature — never on a heater — and reshape them by hand while damp. Our glove cleaning guide covers the full rescue procedure for a soaked Cabretta.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do rain gloves really work better wet?
Yes. The woven microfiber surface increases friction when moisture fills the fibers — it's the same principle as wet-weather football receiver gloves. Dry, they feel slightly less tacky than leather; wet, there's no comparison.
Can I just use my regular glove and dry it between shots?
In drizzle, briefly. In sustained rain, you're losing that battle by the third hole — and you're sacrificing a good leather glove to do it.
One rain glove or two?
Two. With no dry-hand tack available, the second glove adds real security on the trail hand.
Be the golfer who's ready: add the Rain Rooster to your bag, and build out the rest of your setup in the accessories collection.