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{{Short description|Groundhog in Ontario, Canada, that celebrates Groundhog Day}} |
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'''Wiarton Willie''' is a famous [[Canada|Canadian]] [[groundhog]] who lives in the [[community]] of [[Wiarton, Ontario|Wiarton]] in [[Bruce County, Ontario]]. Every [[February 2]], on [[Groundhog Day]], Willie takes part in the local ''Wiarton Willie Festival''. His role is to determine if there will be an early [[Spring (season)|spring]] or not. |
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[[File:Wiarton Willie Park (47508970351).jpg|thumb|right|A monument to Wiarton Willie in Bluewater Park]] |
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'''Wiarton Willie''' is the name given to a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[groundhog]] who lives in the [[community]] of [[Wiarton, Ontario|Wiarton]] in [[Bruce County, Ontario]]. Every February 2, on [[Groundhog Day]], Willie takes part in the local ''Wiarton Willie Festival''. His role is to predict whether there will be an early [[Spring (season)|spring]]. Although the original Wiarton Willie died in 1999, the Wiarton Groundhog Day celebrations continue each year with a successor of the original Willie (except in 1999 and 2021 where, due to the previous Willies' deaths, no groundhog was used), and each successor is also referred to as Wiarton Willie. |
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Groundhog Day, featuring Wiarton Willie, is a popular annual festival in Wiarton and is similar to events in other locations in North America. A midwinter celebration involving an animal with predictive powers was an element of [[Celts|Celtic]] culture.<ref name = tolerance>[http://www.religioustolerance.org/wicimbolc.htm Eight Wiccan/Neopagan Sabbats: Imbolc: Jan-31 to Feb-02]. Religious Tolerance.org. Retrieved on: November 4, 2007.</ref> The link between weather prediction and the day is said to have been inspired by an old [[Scottish literature|Scottish]] couplet: "If [[Candlemas]] Day is bright and clear/ There'll be two winters in the year."<ref name = CBC>CBC News (February 2, 2007) [http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/groundhogday/ "What Wiarton Willie sees."] CBC News In Depth: Groundhog Day. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.</ref> |
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Unlike other weather predicting groundhogs like [[Punxsutawney Phil]] (from [[Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania]]), Willie is an [[albino]]. |
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==History== |
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There has been more than one Willie over the years. The original Willie was famously found dead, in his burrow three days before the scheduled appearance in 1999. That year's festival became a memorial for the special rodent, though his keeper claims that Willie provided his prediction before his death. He was replaced the following year, by another albino groundhog. |
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The story of Wiarton Willie dates back to 1956. A Wiarton resident named Mac McKenzie wanted to showcase his childhood home to his many friends, so he sent out invitations for a "Groundhog Day" gathering. One of these invitations fell into the hands of a ''[[Toronto Star]]'' reporter. The reporter travelled to Wiarton looking for the Groundhog Day event. None of the townspeople knew about a festival, but one suggested he check at the Arlington Hotel, the local watering hole. There the reporter found McKenzie and his friends partying and was invited to join them. The next day, the reporter lamented to McKenzie that he needed some kind of story to take back to justify his expenses. So McKenzie grabbed his wife's fur hat, which had a large button on the front, went out to the parking lot, dug a burrow in the snow and pronounced a prognostication (which no one remembers). The picture of Mac and the hat ran in the February 3, 1956 edition of the Toronto Star. A year later, about 50 people arrived for the festival. Half were reporters from various media, including the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC]] and [[Canadian Press]]. Seizing on the opportunity, McKenzie invented a festival that has been added to over the years.<ref>[http://southbrucepeninsula.com/index.cfm?page=254&r=37361 "How the Festival Started."] southbrucepeninsula.com. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.</ref> |
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Wiarton Willie himself is a more recent addition to the festivities. In the early years, prognostication was provided by the "mythical" trio of groundhogs Grundoon, Muldoon and Sand Dune. Willie appeared on the scene in the 1980s. Wiarton Willie's predictive powers are attributed (by his followers) to his situation on the 45th parallel, exactly halfway between the [[Equator]] and the [[North Pole]]. He is claimed locally to be accurate in his prognostications around 90% of the time;<ref name = CBC /> scientists have estimated Willie's accuracy at 25%.<ref>{{Cite web |author=Ayers |first=Tom |date=January 31, 2018 |title=Shubenacadie Sam unlikely to see his shadow |url=https://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1541732-shubenacadie-sam-unlikely-to-see-his-shadow |url-status=deviated |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180909061921/https://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1541732-shubenacadie-sam-unlikely-to-see-his-shadow |archive-date=2018-09-09 |access-date=2023-12-27 |website=The Chronicle Herald}}</ref> |
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===Death and successors=== |
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==The History of Wiarton Willie== |
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The original Wiarton Willie lived to the advanced age of 22, and was found dead only two days before Groundhog Day in 1999. The organizers were unable to find a replacement, and instead marked Groundhog Day by revealing "Willie" in a coffin. He had been dressed in a tuxedo, had coins over his eyes, and a carrot between his paws. The real Willie had in fact decomposed, and the body in the coffin was that of an older, stuffed groundhog. [[The Associated Press]] was obliged to issue a retraction on its wires.<ref>Pollenatrix (May 27, 2004) [http://pollenatrix.blogspot.com/2004/05/groundhog-tales.html "Groundhog Tales."] Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.</ref> |
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The story of the origin of Wiarton Willie dates back to 1956. A Wiarton resident named Mac McKenzie, his friend Don O'Rourke I and others wanted to showcase Wiarton to their many friends, so invitations were sent out for a "Groundhog Day" gathering in Wiarton. One of these invitations fell into the hands of a [[Toronto Star]] reporter. The reporter travelled to Wiarton looking for the Groundhog Day event. None of the townspeople knew about a festival, but one suggested he check at the Arlington Hotel, the local watering hole. There the reporter found McKenzie and his friends partying and was invited to join them. The next day, the reporter lamented to McKenzie that he needed some kind of story to take back to justify his expenses. So McKenzie grabbed his wife's fur hat, which had a large button on the front, trooped out into the parking lot, dug a little burrow in the snow and pronounced a prognostication (which no one remembers). The picture of Mac and the hat ran in the Feburary 3, 1956 edition of the Toronto Star. A year later, about 50 people arrived for the festival. Half were reporters from various media, including the CBC and Canadian Press. Seizing on the opportunity, McKenzie invented a festival that has been added to over the years.[http://southbrucepeninsula.com/index.cfm?page=254&r=37361] |
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Wiarton Willie's keepers groom [[understudy|understudies]], nicknamed "Wee Willie" during the elder groundhog's lifetime, to eventually replace the reigning Wiarton Willie when they die. Wiarton Willies have typically had lifespans longer than the 4–9 years of a typical groundhog,<ref>{{cite web|last=Doherty|first=James G.|title=Gestation, Incubation, and Longevity of Selected Animals|url=https://www.infoplease.com/math-science/biology/plants-animals/gestation-incubation-and-longevity-of-selected-animals|work=The Wildlife Conservation Society|accessdate=November 24, 2021}}</ref> and thus other groundhogs may have served in the role unreported. Wiarton Willie II was reported as deceased on July 11, 2006, after fighting an infection for the previous month. |
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Note that Wiarton Willie himself is a more recent addition to the festivities. In the early years, prognostication was provided by the "mythical" trio of groundhogs Grundoon, Muldoon and Sand Dune. Willie appeared on the scene in the 1980s. |
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On September 15, 2017, Wiarton Willie III died at 13. Two-year-old Wee Willie became Wiarton Willie IV on September 30, 2017, coinciding with a memorial service for the old Willie.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2017/09/20/wiarton-willie-ontarios-high-profile-forecasting-groundhog-dies-at-13.html|title=Wiarton Willie, Ontario's high-profile forecasting groundhog, dies at 13|date=September 20, 2017|via=Toronto Star}}</ref> Wiarton Willie IV died in 2020, leading to the 2021 prediction being made without the presence of a groundhog. Wiarton Willie IV's death was not publicly announced until November 2021.<ref name="CBC death">{{cite web | title=Yet another Wiarton Willie is dead. Here's a look at the strange history behind the beloved groundhog - CBC News | website=CBC | date=November 25, 2021 | url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/wiarton-willie-ontario-groundhog-1.6262533 | access-date=November 26, 2021}}</ref> Wiarton Willie V was introduced at the 2022 Groundhog Day celebration; he is the first brown groundhog to assume the position.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bayshorebroadcasting.ca/2022/02/02/wiarton-willie-prepares-to-make-his-66th-annual-prediction/ |title=Wiarton Willie Predicts an Early Spring |last=Hermiz |first=Matt |date=February 2, 2022 |website=bayshorebroadcasting.ca |access-date=February 3, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/news/local-news/big-brown-wiarton-willie-to-make-prediction-via-livestream-next-week |title=Big brown Wiarton Willie to make prediction via livestream next week |last=Cowan |first=Greg |date=January 26, 2022 |website=owensoundsuntimes.com |access-date= February 3, 2022}}</ref> |
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The original Wiarton Willie was an albino who was thought to have lived to the advanced age of twenty-two. Willie passed away during hibernation during the winter of 1998-99. Citizens of Wiarton were dismayed to learn this just before Groundhog Day, 1999. |
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Willie's death was national and international news (''see'' [[Wiarton Willie#The death (and life) of Wiarton Willie|The death (and life) of Wiarton Willie]], below). |
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===Death of cubs controversy=== |
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Groundhogs are large ground squirrels, members of the [[marmot]] family; also known as "woodchucks," and "whistle-pigs." They are not noted for their intelligence. When startled or excited, they emit a high-pitched squeal. This is counter-productive, as it may alert predators who can then easily find and dispatch the hapless animal. |
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In May 2003, two of Wiarton Willie II's Wee Willies disappeared; three months later, they were found dead in the burrow where they resided with Willie. Because groundhogs are known to be territorial animals, Willie was suspected of killing the two, an allegation that was never proven. Francesca Dobbyn, who looked after the groundhogs, informed her immediate supervisor who chose not to inform the Wiarton city council of the incident, fearing bad publicity; the council agreed to allow Dobbyn to keep her job despite the scandal.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/wiarton-willie-suspected-in-double-murder-1.375226| title=Wiarton Willie suspected in double murder| date=September 23, 2003| work=CBC}}</ref> |
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==Past predictions== |
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How, then, are they renown for predicting weather? In fact, they are not very good at it. As a [[CBC]] news article notes: |
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{|class="wikitable" |
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:"The people of Wiarton insist their Willie was accurate 90 per cent of the time, but what do you expect them to say when the Groundhog Festival attracts 20,000 free-spending tourists to the town every February? Scientific studies show groundhogs are accurate only 37 per cent of the time."[http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/groundhogday/] |
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|2024 || "Early spring" |
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|2023 || "Early spring" |
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|2022 || "Early spring" |
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|2021 || "Early spring" |
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|2020 || "Early spring" |
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|2019 || "Early spring" |
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|2018 || "Long winter" |
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| 2017 || "Early spring" |
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| 2016 || "Long winter" |
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| 2015 || "Early spring" |
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| 2014 || "Long winter"<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/wiarton-willie-sees-shadow-forecasts-6-more-weeks-of-winter-1.1666706|title=Wiarton Willie sees shadow, forecasts 6 more weeks of winter|first=Adam|last=Miller|date=February 2, 2014|website=CTVNews}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| 2013 || "Early spring"<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://torontosun.com/2013/02/02/wiarton-willie-predicts-on-groundhog-day|title=Wiarton Willie predicts early spring on Groundhog Day|website=torontosun}}</ref> |
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| 2012 || "Early spring"<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140220213001/https://www.southbrucepeninsula.com/en/economicdevelopment/resources/WilliesPredictions1955-2012.pdf Wiarton Willie's Predictions]</ref> |
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| 2011 || "Early spring" |
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| 2010 || "Long winter" |
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| 2009 || "Long winter" |
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| 2008 || "Early spring" |
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| 2007 || "Early spring" |
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| 2006 || "Early spring" |
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| 2005 || "Early spring" |
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| 2004 || "Long winter" |
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| 2003 || "Early spring" |
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| 2002 || "Early spring" |
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| 2001 || "Early spring" |
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| 2000 || "Long winter" |
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| 1999 || "Early spring" |
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|} |
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==Groundhog Day show== |
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The article notes that one would do better flipping a coin. It also states that Wiarton Willie's predictive powers are attributed (by his followers) to his situation on the 45th parallel, exactly halfway between the Equator and the North Pole. |
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Groundhog Day in Wiarton is a major celebration, with [[dance]]s, [[parade]]s, [[ice hockey]] tournaments, [[curling]] [[bonspiel]]s, [[pancake]] breakfasts, [[darts]] and [[snooker]] tournaments, [[sleigh]] rides, a [[casino|Monte Carlo Night]] and a [[fish fry]].<ref>[http://southbrucepeninsula.com/index.cfm?page=985&r=37811 Wiarton Willie Festival Events]. southbrucepeninsula.com. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.</ref> Around 10,000 people are said to attend. It has been called "one [of] the most popular events in Ontario" and has twice been named "the World's Greatest Event" by Seattle's Festivals.com.<ref name = tolerance/><ref name= Canoe>Jim Fox (February 2, 2007) {{usurped|1=[https://archive.today/20130115062336/http://travel.canoe.ca/Travel/Canada/Ontario/2007/01/27/3474961-sun.html "Waking Wiarton Willie."]}} Canoe.ca. Retrieved on: November 4, 2007.</ref> |
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==Notes== |
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===The death (and life) of Wiarton Willie=== |
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{{reflist}} |
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<!--The following is a lengthy quote which needs to be paraphrased. It is such a great story, I thought it should go into the article as is, for now. Perhaps someone could complete the paraphrase later. --Sunray, August 24, 2005 |
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--> |
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In the annals of groundhog day appearances, there are few stories that can top the scandalous tale of the demise of the first Wiarton Willie: |
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==External links== |
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:One late winter day, on a Saturday afternoon, the 22 year old groundhog was found dead in his burrow. He was due to make his annual appearance on Tuesday. Now, you must understand that people all over Ontario await news of Wiarton Willy's shadow, or at least the media must think so, because the outcome is reported on the radio, on the 6 o'clock news, and in all the newspapers. Large crowds of people converge on Wiarton on this day each year, their children in tow, to be present when the four-footed oracle of the spring equinox pops out of his burrow and makes his pronouncement known. |
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* [http://www.southbrucepeninsula.com/en/wiartonwillie/welcome.asp Wiarton Willie Festival] |
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* [http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/wiarton-willie-suspected-in-double-murder-1.375226 Wiarton Willie suspected in double murder] |
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{{Groundhog Day}} |
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:The organizers, with only two days left before the event and no time to find a replacement, decided to keep it a secret. |
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[[Category:Recurring events established in 1956]] |
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:The day arrived. Faced with the inevitable, the organizers unveiled a very dead and very stiff white rodent laid out in a tiny coffin, dressed up in a tiny tuxedo, with two shiny pennies over its eyes and a carrot between its paws. Solemn words of memorial were issued over the well-dressed carcass - glasses raised, hats doffed, and heads bowed. |
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[[Category:1999 animal deaths]] |
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[[Category:2006 animal deaths]] |
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:Not everyone got the humour of the situation. Mothers were shocked and children were traumatized. Some dismissed it as a tasteless publicity stunt. Then scandal broke: |
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[[Category:2017 animal deaths]] |
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[[Category:2020 animal deaths]] |
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::Last week the Associated Press published what may be the most bizarre caption correction to have ever moved on the wires. AP corrected the spelling of the late Wiarton Willie the Groundhog's name, but more significantly, they also had to explain that their photographer had been lied to when he took a photo that purported to show the recently departed creature in his coffin. Apparently the real late Willie had been dead so long, and was so badly decomposed when his handlers tried to roust him for Groundhog Day, that they used an older stuffed groundhog as a stand-in for their photo of Willie's wake. |
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[[Category:Culture of Canada]] |
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[[Category:Individual groundhogs]] |
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:We didn't try to hide the fact that he was stuffed," said Tom Ashman of Wiarton Willie's publicity team. "If the media had been doing their job they would have seen the stitches on the belly." |
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[[Category:Holiday characters]] |
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[[Category:Bruce County]] |
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:But, why fake it? |
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[[Category:Individual albino animals]] |
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[[Category:Individual animals in Canada]] |
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:"People needed closure," Ashman explained. |
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[[Category:Oracular animals]] |
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::—POLLENATRIX Botanical discipline, daily (May 27, 2004). |
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[[Category:Groundhog Day]] |
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The new Wiarton Willie is also known as "Wee Willie," and is another albino groundhog. There are actually two Wee Willies—Wee Willie and Wee Willie-2—for good measure. |
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==The big show== |
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It is a major celebration, with [[Dance|dances]], [[Parade|parades]], [[ice hockey]] tournaments, [[curling]] bonspiels, [[pancake]] breakfasts, [[darts]] and [[snooker]] tournaments, [[sleigh]] rides, a [[casino|Monte Carlo Night]] and a [[fish fry]]. |
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==Other Groundhog Day stars== |
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Wiarton Willie, as great as he is reputed to be, is by no means unique. Other towns throughout North American are known to have winter-predicting groundhogs. According to CBC News, the "second most famous"—after Wiarton Willie—is Punxsutawney Phil of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania (immortalized in the movie [[Groundhog Day (film)|Groundhog Day]]). There is also "Brandon Bob" of Brandon, Manitoba, "Staten Island Chuck" in New York, "Balzac Billy" in Alberta, "Shubenacadie Sam" in Nova Scotia, and "Gary the Groundhog" in Kleinburg, Ontario. |
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==See also== |
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* [[Groundhog Day]] |
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* [[Punxsutawney Phil]] |
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* [http://www.geocities.com/homeofspanishjoe/ Spanish Joe] |
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* [[Staten Island Chuck]] |
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==External link== |
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* [http://www.southbrucepeninsula.com/index.cfm?member=willie South Bruce Peninsula Official Homepage - Information about Wiarton Willie] |
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[[Category:Canadian culture]] |
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[[Category:Famous animals]] |
Latest revision as of 11:19, 15 June 2024
Wiarton Willie is the name given to a Canadian groundhog who lives in the community of Wiarton in Bruce County, Ontario. Every February 2, on Groundhog Day, Willie takes part in the local Wiarton Willie Festival. His role is to predict whether there will be an early spring. Although the original Wiarton Willie died in 1999, the Wiarton Groundhog Day celebrations continue each year with a successor of the original Willie (except in 1999 and 2021 where, due to the previous Willies' deaths, no groundhog was used), and each successor is also referred to as Wiarton Willie.
Groundhog Day, featuring Wiarton Willie, is a popular annual festival in Wiarton and is similar to events in other locations in North America. A midwinter celebration involving an animal with predictive powers was an element of Celtic culture.[1] The link between weather prediction and the day is said to have been inspired by an old Scottish couplet: "If Candlemas Day is bright and clear/ There'll be two winters in the year."[2]
History
[edit]The story of Wiarton Willie dates back to 1956. A Wiarton resident named Mac McKenzie wanted to showcase his childhood home to his many friends, so he sent out invitations for a "Groundhog Day" gathering. One of these invitations fell into the hands of a Toronto Star reporter. The reporter travelled to Wiarton looking for the Groundhog Day event. None of the townspeople knew about a festival, but one suggested he check at the Arlington Hotel, the local watering hole. There the reporter found McKenzie and his friends partying and was invited to join them. The next day, the reporter lamented to McKenzie that he needed some kind of story to take back to justify his expenses. So McKenzie grabbed his wife's fur hat, which had a large button on the front, went out to the parking lot, dug a burrow in the snow and pronounced a prognostication (which no one remembers). The picture of Mac and the hat ran in the February 3, 1956 edition of the Toronto Star. A year later, about 50 people arrived for the festival. Half were reporters from various media, including the CBC and Canadian Press. Seizing on the opportunity, McKenzie invented a festival that has been added to over the years.[3]
Wiarton Willie himself is a more recent addition to the festivities. In the early years, prognostication was provided by the "mythical" trio of groundhogs Grundoon, Muldoon and Sand Dune. Willie appeared on the scene in the 1980s. Wiarton Willie's predictive powers are attributed (by his followers) to his situation on the 45th parallel, exactly halfway between the Equator and the North Pole. He is claimed locally to be accurate in his prognostications around 90% of the time;[2] scientists have estimated Willie's accuracy at 25%.[4]
Death and successors
[edit]The original Wiarton Willie lived to the advanced age of 22, and was found dead only two days before Groundhog Day in 1999. The organizers were unable to find a replacement, and instead marked Groundhog Day by revealing "Willie" in a coffin. He had been dressed in a tuxedo, had coins over his eyes, and a carrot between his paws. The real Willie had in fact decomposed, and the body in the coffin was that of an older, stuffed groundhog. The Associated Press was obliged to issue a retraction on its wires.[5]
Wiarton Willie's keepers groom understudies, nicknamed "Wee Willie" during the elder groundhog's lifetime, to eventually replace the reigning Wiarton Willie when they die. Wiarton Willies have typically had lifespans longer than the 4–9 years of a typical groundhog,[6] and thus other groundhogs may have served in the role unreported. Wiarton Willie II was reported as deceased on July 11, 2006, after fighting an infection for the previous month.
On September 15, 2017, Wiarton Willie III died at 13. Two-year-old Wee Willie became Wiarton Willie IV on September 30, 2017, coinciding with a memorial service for the old Willie.[7] Wiarton Willie IV died in 2020, leading to the 2021 prediction being made without the presence of a groundhog. Wiarton Willie IV's death was not publicly announced until November 2021.[8] Wiarton Willie V was introduced at the 2022 Groundhog Day celebration; he is the first brown groundhog to assume the position.[9][10]
Death of cubs controversy
[edit]In May 2003, two of Wiarton Willie II's Wee Willies disappeared; three months later, they were found dead in the burrow where they resided with Willie. Because groundhogs are known to be territorial animals, Willie was suspected of killing the two, an allegation that was never proven. Francesca Dobbyn, who looked after the groundhogs, informed her immediate supervisor who chose not to inform the Wiarton city council of the incident, fearing bad publicity; the council agreed to allow Dobbyn to keep her job despite the scandal.[11]
Past predictions
[edit]2024 | "Early spring" |
2023 | "Early spring" |
2022 | "Early spring" |
2021 | "Early spring" |
2020 | "Early spring" |
2019 | "Early spring" |
2018 | "Long winter" |
2017 | "Early spring" |
2016 | "Long winter" |
2015 | "Early spring" |
2014 | "Long winter"[12] |
2013 | "Early spring"[13] |
2012 | "Early spring"[14] |
2011 | "Early spring" |
2010 | "Long winter" |
2009 | "Long winter" |
2008 | "Early spring" |
2007 | "Early spring" |
2006 | "Early spring" |
2005 | "Early spring" |
2004 | "Long winter" |
2003 | "Early spring" |
2002 | "Early spring" |
2001 | "Early spring" |
2000 | "Long winter" |
1999 | "Early spring" |
Groundhog Day show
[edit]Groundhog Day in Wiarton is a major celebration, with dances, parades, ice hockey tournaments, curling bonspiels, pancake breakfasts, darts and snooker tournaments, sleigh rides, a Monte Carlo Night and a fish fry.[15] Around 10,000 people are said to attend. It has been called "one [of] the most popular events in Ontario" and has twice been named "the World's Greatest Event" by Seattle's Festivals.com.[1][16]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Eight Wiccan/Neopagan Sabbats: Imbolc: Jan-31 to Feb-02. Religious Tolerance.org. Retrieved on: November 4, 2007.
- ^ a b CBC News (February 2, 2007) "What Wiarton Willie sees." CBC News In Depth: Groundhog Day. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.
- ^ "How the Festival Started." southbrucepeninsula.com. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.
- ^ Ayers, Tom (January 31, 2018). "Shubenacadie Sam unlikely to see his shadow". The Chronicle Herald. Archived from the original on 2018-09-09. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
- ^ Pollenatrix (May 27, 2004) "Groundhog Tales." Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.
- ^ Doherty, James G. "Gestation, Incubation, and Longevity of Selected Animals". The Wildlife Conservation Society. Retrieved November 24, 2021.
- ^ "Wiarton Willie, Ontario's high-profile forecasting groundhog, dies at 13". September 20, 2017 – via Toronto Star.
- ^ "Yet another Wiarton Willie is dead. Here's a look at the strange history behind the beloved groundhog - CBC News". CBC. November 25, 2021. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
- ^ Hermiz, Matt (February 2, 2022). "Wiarton Willie Predicts an Early Spring". bayshorebroadcasting.ca. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
- ^ Cowan, Greg (January 26, 2022). "Big brown Wiarton Willie to make prediction via livestream next week". owensoundsuntimes.com. Retrieved February 3, 2022.
- ^ "Wiarton Willie suspected in double murder". CBC. September 23, 2003.
- ^ Miller, Adam (February 2, 2014). "Wiarton Willie sees shadow, forecasts 6 more weeks of winter". CTVNews.
- ^ "Wiarton Willie predicts early spring on Groundhog Day". torontosun.
- ^ Wiarton Willie's Predictions
- ^ Wiarton Willie Festival Events. southbrucepeninsula.com. Retrieved on: November 3, 2007.
- ^ Jim Fox (February 2, 2007) "Waking Wiarton Willie."[usurped] Canoe.ca. Retrieved on: November 4, 2007.