The Guardian (USA)

Canadian groundhog Fred la Marmotte found dead before planned prediction

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A Canadian woodchuck has cast a different type of shadow over Groundhog Day: just hours before he was due to predict spring’s arrival, Fred la Marmotte was found dead.

The groundhog showed “no vital signs” when the organizer of the annual 2 February tradition in Val-d’Espoir, Quebec, tried to wake him from hibernatio­n, local media reported.

If Fred had seen his shadow, then he would have quickly scurried back inside his burrow, a portent of six more weeks of winter.

No shadow would have meant Fred staying above ground, auguring an early spring.

But after some 40 minutes of festivitie­s, including singing and dancing, organizer Roberto Blondin told waiting spectators that Fred had passed away.

He added that he thought the groundhog had died in late fall or early December, aged nine, CBC reported.

Undeterred, a child wearing a groundhog hat was called up to the stage, handed a stuffed toy groundhog and asked for his prediction. He forecast a lengthy winter.

Further south in Pennsylvan­ia, another famous furry weather forecaster, Punxsutawn­ey Phil, also predicted six more weeks of the cold season.

A number of towns in the US and Canada celebrate Groundhog Day, but Punxsutawn­ey Phil, named for his home town, is the most celebrated of the rodent forecaster­s.

That is in large part due to the 1993 cult classic movie of the same name, featuring Bill Murray in which his character wakes up and experience­s the same day again and again.

Phil and his predecesso­rs, also called Phil, have been forecastin­g since 1887.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion tweeted that Phil has had a 40% accuracy rate over the past 10 years.

In New York, the more optimistic Staten Island Chuck predicted an early

spring for the eighth year in a row. In 2014, then mayor Bill de Blasio dropped one of Chuck’s predecesso­rs during the city’s ceremony. It died a week later, prompting social media users to joke he had killed it.

 ?? Photograph: Alan Freed/Reuters ?? Punxsutawn­ey Phil (pictured) is the most famous of rodent prognostic­ators. Other groundhog forecaster­s have met untimely fates.
Photograph: Alan Freed/Reuters Punxsutawn­ey Phil (pictured) is the most famous of rodent prognostic­ators. Other groundhog forecaster­s have met untimely fates.

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