Seasonal & Holidays
Groundhog Day: Punxsutawney Phil Has Spoken
The little fella made his annual trip outside to look for his shadow. The news? Bleak.

Don't put away your snow shovel and parka just yet. Punxsutawney Phil has spoken. Er, seen his shadow. And, you know what that means: Six more weeks of winter.
According to folklore, spring will come early if Punxsutawney Phil doesn’t see its shadow and will last another six weeks if it does. For the record, spring doesn’t officially arrive this year until March 20, and that’s a little more than six weeks away.
This morning, in Punxsutawney, Pa., spectators bundled up and bopped to music amid the camp and kitsch with the temperature around 11 degrees. Records dating to 1887 show Phil predicting more winter 103 times while forecasting an early spring just 18 times. No records exist for the remaining years. Meantime, Stormfax Almanac, which logs Phil's forecasts, says the groundhog has been correct only 39 percent of the time.
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The ritual involving Punxsutawney Phil is a big deal in the Pennsylvania town of about 5,800, but several other states have their own observances. Punxsutawney Phil makes his predictions at Gobbler’s Knob in the Pennsylvania Wilds, and everyone who’s anyone comes out to see him.
>>> California's 'Mojave Maxine' Counters Punxsutawney Phil's Forecast
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According to AccuWeather.com, which will release its region-by-region spring forecast Feb. 7, winter isn’t leaving anytime soon. Bitterly cold air will make a return by mid-February, and several regions are in for a lot more snow.
In Detroit, AccuWeather shows a mix of sun and snow with temperatures in the 20s and 30s through February, and climbing into the 30s and 40s for March. And, yes, there will be snow and rain – and probably a few sunny days suitable for a light jacket.
Here are five things to know about Groundhog Day:
1. Before there was a Groundhog Day, there was Candlemas, an early Christian holiday in which candles were blessed and distributed by local clergy. The celebrants eventually declared that clear skies on Candlemas meant winter would persist. Germans selected an animal — the hedgehog — to predict the end of winter, and brought the idea to America. Groundhogs, which are also known as woodchucks, were plentiful in Pennsylvania, where many Germans settled, so the tradition was Americanized.
2. Punxsutawney Phil has his own “inner circle” — the guys who are always pictured wearing top hats as he emerges. They’re a group of local dignitaries charged with planning the festivities and ensuring they come off without a hitch every year, but also with the feeding and care of Phil.
3. Punxsutawney Phil is pretty spoiled. He doesn’t have to burrow into the dirt to survive winter like less-famous groundhogs. He lives in a warm terrarium built into the Punxsutawney library and visitors can stop and gawk at him any time they want.
4. Groundhogs have an average lifespan of six to eight years, 10 tops, but Punxsutawney Phil gets a life-extending elixir — called “groundhog punch” — every summer during the annual Groundhog Picnic to extend his lifespan by as much as seven years. An added effect of the punch is that it makes Phil appear to have gotten a dye job, because his coat might be gray one year and a youngish-looking brown the next.
5. The 1993 movie “Groundhog Day” gave the celebration in Punxsutawney a big boost. Bill Murray stars as a hapless weatherman named Phil. Dispatched to cover the emergence of the groundhog from its hole, he is caught in a blizzard he didn’t predict. Trapped in a time warp, he can’t escape and must live the day over and over until he gets it right. Murray went to Punxsutawney in 1992 to prepare for the role, and by 1997, the number of people attending the festivities had swelled to about 35,000 visitors.
Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images News/Getty Images
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