You Know You're In Arizona When...
- You can say "115 degrees" without fainting.
- You can be in the snow, then drive for an hour and it will be over 100
degrees.
- You notice your car overheating before you drive it.
- You have to go to a fake beach for some fake waves.
- You discover, in July, that it only takes two fingers to drive your car.
- You can make sun tea instantly.
- You run your air conditioner in the middle of winter so you can use your
fireplace.
- You can say "Hohokam" and people don't think you're laughing funny.
- You no longer associate bridges (or rivers) with water.
- You notice the best parking place is determined by shade instead of by
distance.
- You see more irrigation water on the street than there is in the Salt
River.
- You know a swamp cooler is not a happy hour drink.
- You realize that Valley Fever isn't a disco dance.
- Hotter water comes from the cold water tap than from the hot one.
- You can pronounce the words, "saguaro," "Tempe," Gila Bend," "San
Xavier," "Canyon de Chelly," "Mogollon Rim," "cholla," "Ajo", and
"Tlaquepaque".
- You actually burn your hand opening the car door.
- You give up on the idea of washing your car until October, because the
dust storms will just get it dirty again anyway.
- You know what a dust devil is.
- Umbrellas are not for rain. In fact, they aren't even waterproof.
- Sunscreen is sold year round, kept at the front of the checkout counter.
- Some fool can market mini-misters for joggers and some other fools will
actually buy them.
- Eight Scottish bagpipers from Canada, dressed in full regalia, pass out
from heat prostration in February.
- A parade for the Phoenix Suns is held at 12:00 noon in June and 500,000
people turn out in 110-degree weather.
- Hot air balloons can't go up, because the air outside is hotter than the
air inside.
- No one would dream of putting vinyl upholstery in a car.
- You've signed so many petitions to recall governors that you can't
remember the name of the incumbent.
- You can understand the reason for a town named "Why".
You know you're in Arizona when you read
things entitled "You Know You're In Arizona!"