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McTucket
02-02-2007, 10:03 PM
Punxsutawney Phil Predicts Early Spring


PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (Feb. 2) - A new pair of hands pulled Punxsutawney Phil from his stump this year, so it was only fitting that the groundhog offered a new prediction.




Phil did not see his shadow on Friday which, according to German folklore, means folks can expect an early spring instead of six more weeks of winter.

Since 1886, Phil has seen his shadow 96 times, hasn't seen it 14 times and there are no records for nine years, according to the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club. The last time Phil failed to see his shadow was in 1999.

More than 15,000 revelers milled about in a misty snow waiting for the prediction, as fireworks exploded overhead and the "Pennsylvania Polka" and other music blared in the background.

Longtime handler Bill Deeley retired after more than a dozen years and was replaced Friday by Punxsutawney Groundhog Club Inner Circle members John Griffiths and Ben Hughes.






Each Feb. 2, thousands of people descend on Punxsutawney, a town of about 6,100 people about 65 miles northeast of Pittsburgh, to celebrate what had essentially been a German superstition.

The Germans believed that if a hibernating animal cast a shadow on Feb. 2 - the Christian holiday of Candlemas - winter would last another six weeks. If no shadow was seen, legend said spring would come early.

MiddleFinger
02-03-2007, 09:48 AM
What German settlers started in Punxsutawney 112 years ago, the top-hatted members of the Groundhog Club's Inner Circle continue every year when they pull Phil from a custom-made burrow at Gobbler's Knob (now we know where the term comes from....ya knob Gobblers!), a wooded hill south of town.

For the rest of the year, Phil and his companion, Phyllis, live in luxury -- a heated hutch at the town's library.

The plump, whiskered meteorologist has seen no shadow just 12 times in 111 years. Records from the National Climactic Data Center in Asheville, North Carolina, show Phil's accuracy rate since 1980 to be about 59 percent.