Well, I'm a northerner and snow is just something to be endured, like taxes or deer flies. You just bear with it as best you can. Back home, 150 miles to the south, Tourists (Skiers) used to ask my Dad what we did up here in the summer. His reply was, "Well, if it falls on a weekend we usually have a picnic." We do have several seasons though- Early winter, winter, dead of winter, mid winter, dead of winter V2, late winter, dead of winter V3, one god awful long winter, all the winter you can stand and then some, early spring, even more winter, mud season, winters last gasp, haying season, hunting season, oh dear lord, not snow already (aka late Sept-Halloween) and back to early winter.
Nothing more entertaining than watching the southern boys, defined as anyone from an area where they think winter is something that can be handled by having all season radials on your car and making sure the antifreeze is good to 0F (Hah! As if!), attempt to "drive in snow", snow being anything over a heavy frost. When you can see the white knuckles on the steering wheel glowing through their Eddie Bauer gloves as they hurtle down the highway at 11 mph, well, it's just a hoot. Watching recent USBP arrivals from El Paso or other southern climes attempt to stay comfortable while working a Border Patrol check point is equally as entertaining. There used to be a breed of female human where I grew up known as a "ski bunny", an outdated, surely sexist term referring to any woman capable of looking pretty darn good in ski pants and a sweater. We don't have them up here, no mountains you see. I'm not even sure they still exist. What we do have is women and some sort of allegedly male type of animal that wears skinny jeans, sneakers and a belly shirt (so as to espose the multiple piercings and tattoos) while walking back to their apt. from the Dollar General. It might not be noteworthy except that the belly exposed by the shirt tends to obscure the top third of the skinny jeans. Makes one wistful for the good old days of heavy coats, bulky sweaters and galoshes.