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Groundhog Day

The day is February 2, 1887. Groundhog Day, a holiday featuring a rodent meteorologist, is celebrated for the first time at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. The legend goes, if a groundhog comes out of its hole and sees its shadow, it gets scared, running back into its burrow; this means six more weeks of winter weather. No shadow, on the other hand, means spring is right around the corner.

Groundhog Day has roots in the ancient Christian tradition of Candlemas. Candlemas is a day where clergy members would bless and then distribute candles needed for the winter. Each candle represents the long and cold winter. Germans expanded upon this concept by selecting their own mammal meteorologist, the hedgehog, to predict their weather. Once in America, German settlers in Pennsylvania carried on the tradition, although they switched from hedgehogs to groundhogs, which were plentiful.

What is a Groundhog?

Groundhogs are also referred to as woodchucks, whistle-pigs, or land-beavers. The term whistle-pig comes from the fact that, when alarmed, a groundhog emits a high-pitched whistle as a warning to the rest of its colony. The name woodchuck has nothing to do with wood. Or chucking. It comes from the Algonquian name for the critters, wuchak. These rodents typically weigh 12 to 15 pounds and live six to eight years. Their diet consists of vegetables and fruits. Groundhogs whistle when afraid or looking for a mate, and are some know them as whistle pigs. They can also climb trees and swim.

Groundhogs begin to hibernate as fall comes to an end; their body temperatures drop significantly during this time. Their heartbeats slow from around eighty to approximately five beats per minute, and they typically lose up to 30% of their body mass. Male groundhogs emerge from their burrows in February to look for a mate (not to predict the weather) before going back underground. They leave hibernation for the season by March.

In 1887, and this is no lie, a groundhog hunting newspaper editor from Punxsutawney, PA writes that Phil, the honorary Punxsutawney groundhog, was America’s only true weather-forecasting groundhog. The line of groundhogs that go by Phil are easily America’s most famous groundhogs; however, other places across North America have their own weather-predicters, from Staten Island Chuck to Birmingham Bill.

Bill Murray’s 1993 film movie Groundhog Day popularized the usage of the term “groundhog day” as one that is repeated over and over. Today, tens of thousands of people converge on Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney each February 2 to witness Phil’s prediction. The Punxsutawney Groundhog Club hosts a three-day celebration featuring entertainment and activities.

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7 Facts About the Groundhog You Didn’t Know

Happy Groundhog Day, fine folks! Today is when we look towards a rodent to find out how much more winter we’ll have to endure. 

 Legend states the groundhog looks out of its burrow today to see if it has a shadow. If it is sunny enough for a shadow, the groundhog will return to the comfort of the den, and winter goes on an additional six weeks.

In honor of the holiday, we’ve rounded up seven tidbits about groundhogs that are likely to be new to you. One for each additional week of winter that’s been forecasted, plus one extra for good measure

1. How much wood? 

Groundhogs are also called whistle-pigs, land-beavers, and more commonly, the woodchuck. The nickname ‘whistle-pig’ comes from the fact that, when frightened, a groundhog emits a high-pitched whistle warning to the rest of the lot. The term ‘woodchuck’ has nothing to do with wood. Or chucking. It comes from the Algonquian name, wuchak.

2. Home on the range 

Both males and females occupy the same territories generationally. There is minimal overlap between home ranges for female woodchucks except for the late spring and early summer months, as females generally try to expand territories. During this time, ranges may overlap by as much as 10%. Males also have territories that do not overlap, though any male territory usually coincides with between one and three adult female territories.

3. Bundles of joy! 

After being born in April, young stick around their home range for only about two or three months. After this, they leave mom’s burrow and disperse. However, at least thirty-five percent of females stick around longer than that, leaving home just after their first birthdays, right before a new litter.

4. Family tradition

Typically, groundhog family groups consist of one male and two females, each toting a litter from the previous breeding season (usually consisting of all females) and their current young. Interactions within a female’s group are friendly for the most part. However, interactions between female groups, even when the same male shares those groups, are rare and aggressive. Even though Papa Woodchuck doesn’t live at home, he visits each of his females and their litter daily.

5. Models of good health

Strangely enough, the groundhog happens to be a good animal for the study of hepatitis B-related liver cancer. Suppose a woodchuck is infected with the hepatitis B virus. In that case, the animal always develops liver cancer, making them integral for the study of both hepatitis b and liver cancer.

6. Looking up

Groundhogs can, in fact, climb trees, though they spend most of their time on and under the ground.

7.  Kiss Kiss 

Groundhogs greet each other with their own version of the Eskimo kiss: a groundhog approaches another and touches their nose to the mouth of the second groundhog. Or, as scientists call it, they make “naso-oral contact.”