NEWS FLASH—7:30AM E.S.T. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, PUNXSUTAWNEY,
PENNSYLVANIA: PHIL HAS EMERGED FROM HIS
BURROW AND SAW HIS SHADOW. SIX MORE
WEEKS OF WINTER!
Unfortunately for Punxsutawney Phil, the official
prognosticator of weather, there's a disturbance in the cosmos perched on the horizon
waiting to swoop in a take over. At
least three challengers set to usurp his throne.
Every year on February 2 a furry rodent of the groundhog
variety named Punxsutawney Phil sticks his head out of his burrow in
Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, to do his annual weather forecast. In the United States and Canada, this is
celebrated as Groundhog Day. If Phil
sees his shadow, it will frighten him and he'll return to his burrow signaling
six more weeks of winter. If he doesn't
see his shadow, he'll emerge and winter will soon be over.
At least, that's what the tradition claims.
The earliest American written reference to a groundhog day
was 1841 in Pennsylvania's Berks County (Pennsylvania Dutch) referring to it as
the German celebration called Candlemas day where a groundhog seeing its shadow
was a weather indication. Since the
first official celebration of Groundhog Day in Pennsylvania in 1886, crowds as
large as 40,000 people have gathered in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, for the
annual celebration. And in recent years
it's been covered live on television.
Quite an accolade for the little ol' groundhog.
The groundhog, also known as a woodchuck, is a member of the
squirrel family. The current
Punxsutawney Phil weighs fifteen pounds and lives in a climate controlled home
in the Punxsutawney library. On
Gobbler's Knob, Phil is placed in a heated burrow underneath a simulated tree
stump on a stage before being pulled out at 7:25AM to make his annual
prediction.
Quite removed from the concept of the groundhog waking from
hibernation and emerging from his burrow in the wild. :)
Phil's forecasting accuracy isn't all that great. He's only been correct 39% of the time. Between 1887 and 2009 he's seen his shadow
ninety-eight times (hmm…I wonder how many of those time was due to the
television lights), has not seen his shadow fifteen times, and on nine
occasions there was no record of what happened.
Punxsutawney Phil, the "Official"
groundhog of Groundhog Day, has more than one challenger for chief weather
prognosticator. And just who are these
brash interlopers?
There's a bullfrog named Snohomish Slew. Punxsutawney Phil might have over a hundred
years of experience on Snohomish Slew, but the bullfrog is a full three days
earlier with his forecast. Thanks to the
Snohomish, Washington, Chamber of Commerce, Slew is guest of honor at a
GroundFrog Day Celebration.
Unlike Phil, when Slew sees his shadow it calls for eight
more weeks of "foggy, soggy weather" in the Pacific Northwest rather
than Phil's six more weeks of winter.
However, Snohomish folklore dictates that whoever rubs the tummy of a
frog on GroundFrog Day will be rewarded with eight weeks of good luck.
Another challenger to Phil's throne is a groundhog named
Staten Island Chuck, a resident of the Staten Island Zoo in New York. According to the Zoo, Chuck's accuracy rate
since 1981 is better than 80 percent.
The Zoo's gates opened at 6:30 this morning, Eastern time, in
preparation for Chuck's 7:30am appearance.
And in the Detroit area, we have Woody the Woodshuck who
resides at the Howell Nature Center. If
Woody comes out to eat her food within a minute, that means spring will soon be
here. According to the Center, Woody has
been right 11 times out of 14, a more accurate record than Phil's.
It appears that the field of Prognosticators of Spring is
getting crowded. :)
4 comments:
Phil lives in a library?? I'd be going back to bed so I could read for six more weeks, too!
Hi, Ashantay: I wonder how we know if he really sees his shadow or if he's only casting a shadow due to all the lights, including the tv lights in addition to the normal lights inside the library. :)
Thanks for your comment.
I'm all for Woody the Woodchuck. Wasn't there a song about him once?
Andrea: I don't know about a song, but there was that tongue-twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. :)
Thanks for your comment.
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