Golfers got off to a slow start in 2014 thanks to the lasting impacting of rough winter weather that lasted well into Spring in many areas. But that trend appears to be changing as Summer kicks in around the U.S.

As Golf Digest reports:

“A report at last month’s National Golf Foundation Business Symposium predicts rounds played will rise 2 percent during the peak golf months of May through September. The reason, according to authors of the report at Weather Trends International, is cooler, drier weather.

“WTI, which studies weather patterns and statistical models to help businesses with sales forecasts, also predicts that regional rounds played will rise from June through September in New England, the Mid-Atlantic, South Atlantic and Central regions. In some cases, those gains could be more than 10 percent over 2013s numbers.

“WTI revealed encouraging signs for 2015, with preliminary indicators show an early spring, especially for the North Central and Northeast, followed by a hot and dry summer for most of the country.”