Sentinel & Enterprise

‘ICONIC’ FEATHERSTO­NE PREDICTS EARLY SPRING

Flamingo made the call in downtown Leominster on Thursday

- By Danielle Ray dray@sentinelan­denterpris­e.com

Feathersto­ne the wise flamingo has once again predicted an early spring, much to the delight of thosewho are not a fan of the upcoming negative wind chill factors this weekend.

Mayor Dean Mazzarella and the wading bird made the call early Thursday morning in Monument Square, where the eighth annual tradition drew dozens of people despite the frigid temps that hovered in the mid-20s but had a feel of high teens.

The sun had been trying to peek out earlier but was behind the clouds when mazzare llama de the announceme­nt right at 8 a.m. on the day otherwise known as Groundhog Day standing beside the plastic pink flamingo and a large stuffed flamingo companion. Although Feathersto­ne saw his shadow last year, which can indicate a longer winter, the feathered soothsayer also predicted an early spring in 2021 and 2020.

“The flamingo is iconic,” Mazzarella noted of the lawn ornament that was invented by Don Feathersto­ne in 1957 while working for Union Products, Inc. of Leominster, which still produces the lawn ornaments today, and has become a city symbol. Feathersto­ne resided in Fitchburg, where he kept 57 plastic flamingos on his back lawn, and he and his wife Nancy dressed alike for over 35 years.

Fitchburg resident Paula Goden had her two granddaugh­ters, Sarah Goden, 4, and Emma Goden, 2, both Leominster­ites, in tow at the downtown event. The grandmothe­r said she has brought them to the annual event before andthat she enjoys coming to watch.

“I like going to anything the mayor does,” Paula Goden shared.

Punxsutawn­ey Phil saw his shadow on Thursday morning, which according to lore means six more weeks of winter and contradict­ed Feathersto­ne’s prophecy. Mazzarella poked fun at the infamous Pennsylvan­ia groundhog, saying that “once the rat is gone nobody puts a rat on their lawn.”

Mazzarella was dressed in his usual flamingo themed getup that included a tophat, flamingo embroidere­d shorts, a navy-blue sweatshirt featuring a flamingo patch he said Alan’s Department Store made for him, and a colorful patchwork jacket gifted to him by late city resident Joe Goodhue, “a very artistic very creative entreprene­ur” who themayor said invented frozen bread dough.

Representa­tives from Leominster Credit Union attended along with City Hall staff and a number of area residents. Ron Girouard from Leominster Access Television filmed the occasion, and it was also livestream­ed on Facebook.

“It’s always cold,” Mazzarella noted of the typical weather for the annual happening.

Ms. G, Massachuse­tts’s official state groundhog who historical­ly has a more likeable prediction record than Punxsutawn­ey Phil, indicated an early spring during a ceremony from her home at Mass Audubon’s Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary in Lincoln — she also did not see her shadow.

 ?? DANIELLE RAY — SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE ?? Sisters Sarah Goden, 4, and Emma Goden, 2, stood beside Feathersto­ne the flamingo and his pink companion on Thursday morning in Monument Square downtown Leominster, where Mayor Dean Mazzarella announced the wading bird did not see his shadow, indicating an early spring.
DANIELLE RAY — SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE Sisters Sarah Goden, 4, and Emma Goden, 2, stood beside Feathersto­ne the flamingo and his pink companion on Thursday morning in Monument Square downtown Leominster, where Mayor Dean Mazzarella announced the wading bird did not see his shadow, indicating an early spring.
 ?? DANIELLE RAY — SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE ?? Leominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella donned his usual flamingo themed outfit on Thursday morning in honor of the annual Feathersto­ne Day event downtown, where the wading bird did not see his shadow indicating an early spring.
DANIELLE RAY — SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE Leominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella donned his usual flamingo themed outfit on Thursday morning in honor of the annual Feathersto­ne Day event downtown, where the wading bird did not see his shadow indicating an early spring.

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