Monday, February 1, 2010

Groundhog! Groundhog! How Much Wood....?

Groundhog! Groundhog! How much wood can you chuck? This doesn't have quite the same ring as the familiar tune, "Woodchuck, woodchuck, how much wood can a woodchuck chuck?" When Punxsutawney Phil in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, or Wiarton Willie in Wiarton, Ontario, or General Beauregard Lee at Yellow River Game Ranch outside Atlanta, Georgia, climb out of their winter quarters very few of us think of this February 2nd celebrity as a woodchuck. So were did he get this name? Possibly from an Indian Tribe. The Agonquians of Narragansett Bay called this first cousin to the ground squirrel, "wuchak." Another question. How did a rodent make it on national TV every February 2nd? As they say in politics, he rode the coattails- not those who dress for the annual event in formal garb-but the coattails of Christianity. Early Christians who also felt pelted down with winter cold had a celebration on February 2nd to encourage a fertile spring ground.The legend of this festive occasion tells that the priests would scan the skies for clear weather But it was the four-legged mammal who made the call with his shadow. In Germany the badger played weatherman and in England and France the bear got the credit for predicting the length of winter. In America the Pennsylvanian community had to settle for the rodent, albeit, the biggest one. Bright skies brought gray shadows and foretold six more cold, winter weeks.


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