Winter in Arizona is a unique experience. If you live in the Grand Canyon state year-round, you know the winter migration changes everything the moment the thermometer dips.

No, I'm not talking about the geese or butterflies traveling south for the winter. I'm talking about a bird of a different feather - the Arizona Snowbird.

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Snowbirds returning to Arizona
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The annual migration of the human retirees who fledge the nests of their home states begin landing in Arizona from October to December. They nest here from colder climates like Ohio and Oregon and stopover in sunny Arizona to wait out the cold winter months.

READ: What will the winter weather be like in Arizona?

The Snowbirds Overwintering in Arizona

Arizona winters generally mean mild temperatures and clear skies. Snowbirds, typically retirees from colder states, then flock to Arizona for the warm weather and slower pace.

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It wouldn't be so bad having throngs of retirees here. Afterall, they bring extra tax dollars and consumer spending into our communities.

Please Do Not Feed the (Snow) Birds

However, there is a downside. The added population brings a ton more traffic, clogging roads with extra cars. Extra SLOW cars.

READ: Do You Know How To Spot an Arizona Native When it Gets Cold?

When the posted speed is, say, fifty-five miles an hour, our delightful snowbirds have a habit of ambling along five or even ten miles and hours below the speed limit. On our smaller single- or double-lane roadways, this bottleneck slows everyone down.

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A Friendly Reminder to Arizona's Temporary Visitors

Here's a reminder to the snowbirds landing in our state: you're here to overwinter and escape the cold. We get it. By February, winter is just gross and overrated.

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However, some of us live here year-round, and we're NOT retired. In fact, we're still trying to get to our jobs, to the school to pick up the kids, and trying to stop at the grocery store - all before WE hit retirement age!

Could you do us a favor and pick the pace - just a little bit? Thank you, and enjoy your stay in sunny Arizona!

Sources: ADOT | 55Places | InDearizona | Arizona Republic

LOOK: The most extreme temperatures in the history of every state

Stacker consulted 2021 data from the NOAA's State Climate Extremes Committee (SCEC) to illustrate the hottest and coldest temperatures ever recorded in each state. Each slide also reveals the all-time highest 24-hour precipitation record and all-time highest 24-hour snowfall.

Keep reading to find out individual state records in alphabetical order.

Gallery Credit: Anuradha Varanasi

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Gallery Credit: Val Davidson