Groundhog Day is a popular North American tradition observed in the United States and Canada and Australia on February 2. It derives from the Pennsylvania Dutch superstition that if a groundhog emerges from its burrow on this day and sees its shadow due to clear weather, it will retreat to its den, and winter will go on for six more weeks; if it does not see its shadow because of cloudiness, spring will arrive early. I’ve never taken much stock in Pennsylvania’s Punxsutawney Phil, probably the most famous of the groundhogs. However, this has been a very weird winter. We’ve had many days above freezing, and then this weekend we are expecting temperatures as low as -22 (with a windchill of -40) on Saturday and then 40 degree temperatures on Sunday. We’ve had days throughout January with barely any snow on the ground and then have two feet of snow the next day before the snow melts again by the end of the week.
The weather is weird all over. Over Christmas when I was in Alabama, it was 50+ degrees when I landed, 18-22 degrees while I was there, and then went to 70 degrees on the day I left. They said I brought the cold with me, and maybe I did since it was “warmer” in Vermont on some of the days while I was gone. It was the coldest temperatures Alabama has had in decades.
Most people in Vermont believe that the worst of winter is yet to come, so if Punxsutawney Phil doesn’t hide from his shadow, I suspect all the Vermont’s woodchucks (what groundhogs are called in Vermont) will. I’ll never understand how people can see these extreme swings in the weather and the shorter winters and not believe the scientists who tell us global warming is a major danger and most certainly real. Most climate scientists say that the ski industry in Vermont, our major industry, will not be viable in a few decades because winters won’t be long enough to justify opening the resorts. It will also affect Vermont’s second major industry, maple syrup production.
If you’re in an area experiencing extreme cold this weekend, please stay warm.
It won't be as cold as VT, but Boston will be bone-chillingly cold this weekend as well.
ReplyDeleteHere in Montreal we are waiting real freazing temperature for Friday and Saturday. As low as -25°C with a wind factor of -40°C.
ReplyDeleteAs our province is spreading way north to the polar circle, some will have -45°C and wind factor of -55°C....
I remember while I was teaching in Sept Îles in the north-east of the St Lawrence river, schools were shut down because the freezing temperature was dangerous for us to remain outside only 10 mintues which can cause frostbite to exposed body part. Also, it was dangerous for school buses to be stuck with engines not working.
The good news it's that will last only two days.
I am Australian, and have lived here all my life (70+ years) but Groundhog Day has never been celebrated here - wrong season anyway, since it is mid-summer with temps in the low to mid 30s (Celsius) in some places. (Maybe some pub - our word for a bar - does it for a lark one night to drum up business LOL). I do know that the movie is shown regularly - a recent article I read says that one journalist viewed the movie every day for a whole year during the covid lockdown, just to see what the experience was like. True!
ReplyDeleteCome to France to warm up
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