Living Through the Seasons in Quincy
A Local’s Guide to Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall
Life in Quincy isn’t just shaped by where you live — it’s shaped by when you live here.
The seasons matter. They change how people move, gather, work, and rest. If you’ve lived here long enough, you don’t fight the seasons — you learn to move with them.
I’ve lived in Quincy for more than 18 years. My family has raised kids here, stayed involved in schools, arts, church, youth sports, and homeschool groups. What follows isn’t a forecast or a highlight reel — it’s what day-to-day life actually feels like as the year turns.
Winter in Quincy
Foggy mornings, quieter days, and steady routines
Winter in Quincy is subtle, but it shapes people.
This is the season of foggy mornings, headlights on early, and a slower start to the day. Snow happens but is usually pretty minor, fog is the real factor you have to pay attention to. We have multiple flavors of fog. Light fog, pea soup grade fog, freezing fog and fog just long enough to make the trip to work perilous and gone fog. Life here moves inward — schedules simplify, routines matter more, and community rhythms tighten.
What Winter Feels Like
Cold, but usually manageable
Foggy mornings are common
Snow happens—but not constantly
Shorter days, longer nights
This is the season of headlights on at 8 a.m. and conversations that start with “Did you see the fog today?”
Daily Life in Winter
Winter is when schedules simplify:
Fewer big events
More indoor activities
Strong church, school, and community rhythms
It’s a season for consistency, not chaos.
What Locals Know
Fog matters more than snow
Good tires > big trucks
Winter is when routines are built
Temperatures can range from -10 to 53 degrees during the winter. 20 degree jumps from early morning to mid afternoon and then back down are common. It’s not flashy, but it’s grounding. People who do well here learn to respect winter instead of resisting it.
Spring in Quincy
Wind (lots of wind), movement, and visible momentum
Spring doesn’t sneak into Quincy — it arrives with wind.
Fields turn green, the canals fill, irrigation starts moving, and the community wakes back up. Schedules fill fast. Youth sports, school events, and outdoor activity return almost all at once. More importantly this is still a farming community and spring is work!
What Spring Feels Like
Windy days (this is normal)
Cool mornings, warmer afternoons
Longer daylight
Energy returns
Spring feels like anticipation.
Community Life in Spring
Youth sports ramp up
School activities increase
Outdoor events return
Farming jumps into 14 hour days for the next 7 months
You feel the town stretching after winter.
What Locals Know
The wind isn’t leaving
Spring is busy—plan accordingly
This is when momentum starts
Locals know the wind is part of the deal (take the hint, I mention the wind a lot). You don’t wait for perfect conditions — you move when it’s time.
Summer in Quincy
Dry Heat, long days, and a full calendar
Summer in Quincy is unapologetic.
It’s hot, dry, and bright. Days are long, evenings are busy, and the community is in constant motion. Events stack up. Sports dominate evenings. There is a constant stream of tourist every weekend from late spring till fall provided by the Gorge Amphitheater (they stick out). Families move from one commitment to the next and the AC runs in over drive. It’s not Arizona, but we usually have 2 to 3 weeks worth of triple digits.
What Summer Feels Like
Hot days, warm nights
Dry heat
Long daylight hours
Full calendars
You adjust your schedule to the sun.
Community & Events
Summer is when:
Events stack up
Sports dominate evenings
Families are constantly moving
This is Quincy at full speed.
What Locals Know
Hydration matters
Shade matters
Evenings are the sweet spot
Locals adjust — shade, hydration, and pacing matter. Summer rewards people who plan ahead and stay flexible.
Fall in Quincy
Cooler air, steady rhythms, and a reset
Fall is when Quincy feels balanced like an overly emotional teenager.
Fall is funny. The heat can fade but it can stay really warm into November, however it can also be freezing by the end of September. Fall is very fluid. Mornings cool off, and routines settle into something sustainable. School schedules are locked in. Sports and arts are in full swing. The pace feels intentional again.
What Fall Feels Like
Cooler days
Crisp mornings
Busy but grounded schedules
A sense of reset
This is when Quincy feels most “right” to many locals.
Life in the Fall
School routines are locked in
Sports and arts are in full swing
Community events feel purposeful
Fall has momentum—but not chaos.
What Locals Know
This is the season people stay
Fall doesn’t last long—enjoy it (Really, we can jump from Summer to Winter in less than 2 weeks.
Winter prep starts here
For many locals, this is the best season — not because it’s loud, but because it’s steady.
Learning to Live With the Seasons
People who thrive in Quincy don’t treat every season the same.
They:
Slow down in winter
Build momentum in spring
Engage fully in summer
Reset in fall
That rhythm shows up in families, businesses, schools, and community life.
This is one of the quiet strengths of living here — Quincy teaches you how to move through a year with intention.
Why the Seasons Matter Here
If you’re considering a move, new to the area, or simply trying to understand life in Quincy more clearly, the seasons tell the story better than statistics ever could.
They shape:
Daily life
Community connection
Energy and expectations
This guide is part of a larger effort to document life in Quincy honestly — not as an attraction, but as a place people actually live.






