Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Not a Hard Knock Life

I've lived in Florida my entire life (I moved from the South to the North when I got married... I'm in the Panhandle now). I laughed at the accuracy of this list I saw over at Rosezilla's. This is no foolin'.

You Might Be a Floridian If...

You know the four seasons really are: almost summer, summer,
not summer but hot, and Christmas.

"Down South" means Key West.

"Panhandling" means going to Pensacola.

Flip-flops are everyday wear.

Shoes are for business meetings and church.

No, wait, flip flops are good for church too.

Socks are only for bowling.

Orange juice from concentrate makes you sick.

Sweet tea can be served at any meal.

An alligator once walked through your neighborhood.

You have a drawer full of bathing suits, and one sweatshirt.

You get annoyed at the tourists who feed seagulls.

A mountain is any hill 100 feet above sea level.

A good parking place has nothing to do with distance from the store, but everything to do with shade.

Your winter coat is made of denim.

You can tell the difference between fire ant bites and mosquito bites.

It's not "pop." It's "soda" or "coke."

Anything under 70 is chilly.

You pass on the right and honk at the elderly.

You understand the futility of exterminating cockroaches.

You can pronounce Okeechobee, Kissimmee, Withlacoochee, Okahumpka and Loxahatchee.

You understand why it's better to have a friend with a boat than have a boat yourself.

You've driven through Yeehaw Junction.

Bumper stickers on the pickup in front of you include various fish, the NRA and a confederate flag.

You were 8 before you realized they made houses without pools.

You were 12 when you first met someone who couldn't swim.

You've worn shorts and used the A/C on Christmas.

You know what the "stingray shuffle" is and why it's important!

You could swim before you could read.

You have to drive north to get to The South.

You know that no other grocery store can compare to Publix.

Every other house had blue roofs in 2004-2005.

You know that anything under a Category 3 just isn't worth waking up for.

You dread lovebug season.

You are on a first name basis with the Hurricane list. They aren't Hurricane Charley, Hurricane Frances...but Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne.

You think a six-foot alligator is actually pretty average.

You haven't seen snow.

You eat ice cream cones in the winter, because it's finally cool enough so that it won't melt instantly down your arm.

You save your sweater for summer when everyone's A/C is so cold, you are freezing in their houses or cars.

8 comments:

Merrie said...

oh yes! I can relate! People here think most of those are just fantasy and can't relate... poor people! They need to venture out and enjoy life!

Rosezilla (Tracie Walker) said...

Yep, that about covers it! I absolutely love Florida - so we probably should add a few of the irresistible things, too!

Melanie said...

Two more issues to add to the Florida list:
mosquitos - the state bird
and humidity

Skoots1moM said...

humidity...the natural "hair curler"

Anonymous said...

What's funny is I caught myself on some of those thinking, "why is that funny." A true Floridian I guess. :-)

Random piece of info, did you know that Floridians were once called Floridans? AKA, the reason the Jackson County Floridan has that name?? Wierd. That's what they told me once.

Gutsy Living said...

Anything under 70 is chilly. This applies to California too, and I feel so bad as my 21-year-old son lives in Michigan.

Greg C said...

How about you lived through Hurricane Donna. And no we didn't evacuate, we rode it out.

You have been to the Crescent city catfish festival and loved it.

You remember going to Blue Springs when it wasn't a park and you swam with the manatee.

You know Mount Dora isn't really a mountain.

Just to add a few/ :)

Rosezilla (Tracie Walker) said...

I did swim with a manatee! We were camping somewhere, I remember the water was super cold, you never really got used to it. And there was a manatee, we swam underneath him and petted him.