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“Punxsutawney Phil” Makes Annual Winter Prediction On Groundhog Day.
What is he thinking? Photograph: Brett Carlsen/Getty Images
What is he thinking? Photograph: Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Groundhog Day: Punxsutawney Phil predicts six more weeks of winter

This article is more than 6 years old

The furry rodent made his forecast after seeing his shadow at dawn on Friday

The handlers of Punxsutawney Phil said the furry rodent has predicted six more weeks of winter after seeing his shadow at dawn on Friday.

The top hat-wearing members of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club’s Inner Circle reveal Phil’s forecast every 2 February. It is based on a German legend surrounding Candlemas. The legend says if a furry rodent casts a shadow that day, winter continues. If not, spring comes early.

Wild glee for the marmota monax, and possibly a loss of feeling from the cold, spreads across the faces of the huddled masses awaiting their hog, Phil. Photograph: Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

In reality, Phil’s prediction is decided ahead of time by the group on Gobbler’s Knob, a tiny hill just outside Punxsutawney about 65 miles (about 100km) north-east of Pittsburgh.

He appears. Yes, Phil, this again. Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex/Shutterstock


Thousands of people gathered overnight to await the forecast, bundled up against the cold and entertained by folk music and a fireworks display, with temperatures around 11F (-12C).

Behold your rodent idol. Photograph: David Maxwell/EPA

The groundhog’s prediction is typically contained in a short poem.

“Up early this morning. Far from home. Are you searching for the Phil-osopher’s stone? Well, even my best friends, they don’t know. Is it an early spring or just more snow,” the proclamation read.

The weather cabal reads its rodent poem. Photograph: David Maxwell/EPA

“My faithful followers, your hands (and my paws) are getting cold so here is my forecast. Not lead, but solid gold: I see my royal Shadow! Six more weeks of Winter to go!”

Records dating to 1887 show Phil has now predicted more winter 103 times while forecasting an early spring just 18 times including last year. There are no records for the remaining years.

Rejoicing on Gobbler’s Knob at the omen of darkness and winter, a perfectly normal tradition in the year 2018. Photograph: David Maxwell/EPA

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