NEWS
FLASH—SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2, PUNXSUTAWNEY, PENNSYLVANIA: PHIL WILL EMERGE FROM HIS BURROW TO PREDICT
WHEN WINTER WILL END. NO SHADOW…NO MORE
WINTER. SEES HIS SHADOW…SIX MORE WEEKS
OF WINTER!
By a strange coincidence those six more weeks
of winter takes us within a few days of the Vernal Equinox which signals the
official end of winter and the first day of spring.
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. 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. Superstition says
that fair weather at that time was seen as a prediction of a stormy and cold
second half to winter, as noted in this Old English saying:
If Candlemas be
fair and bright,
Winter has another
flight.
If Candlemas brings
clouds and rain,
Winter will not
come again.
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. Since 1887, the groundhog has seen his shadow
over 100 times [hmm…I wonder how many of those recent times were due to the
television lights] predicting a longer winter and has not seen it only a few
times to predict an early spring. There
is no record of his prediction for 9 years in the late 1800s.
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. :)
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