Groundhog Day: Manitoba rodents predict early spring - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:27 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Groundhog Day: Manitoba rodents predict early spring

Manitobans can look forward to an early spring, if the province's two rodent weather prognosticators - Winnipeg Willow and Manitoba Merv - are to be believed today.

Winnipeg Willow and Manitoba Merv did not see their shadows on Monday

RAW: Winnipeg Willow's Groundhog Day forecast

10 years ago
Duration 2:25
Lisa Tretiak of the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre sets up Winnipeg Willow's Groundhog Day forecast for 2015.

Manitobans can look forward to an early spring, if the province's two rodent weather prognosticators are to be believed.

Winnipeg Willow, a woodchuck from the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, did not see her shadow at Cabela's Winnipeg shortly after 8 a.m. CT.

Winnipeg Willow, a woodchuck from the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, did not see her shadow at Cabela's Winnipeg shortly after 8 a.m. CT. (Travis Golby/CBC)
Meanwhile, a puppet known as Manitoba Merv also did not see his shadow upon emerging from his cardboard box hole at Oak Hammock Marsh.

According to legend, if a groundhog sees its shadow on Feb. 2, it will retreat to its burrow and there will be six more weeks of winter.

BothMervand Willow were operating under cloudy conditions on Monday morning.

Staff at the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre say they didn't just count on whether Willow saw her shadow or not they monitored her activity throughout the winter as well.

Manitoba Merv did not see his shadow at Oak Hammock Marsh near Winnipeg on Monday. (Oak Hammock Marsh)
"What we would believe is if she's more active during the winter time that we're going to see an early spring, and if she was quieter and sleepy like she was last winter, then we would predict another six more weeks of winter," said president Lisa Tretiak.

The temperature was 17 C in the morning, but it felt more like 22 C with the wind chill.

After a weekend that came with extreme cold warnings, CBC meteorologist John Sauder is forecasting temperatures in the mid-minus-teens early this week but a high of just 20 C on Wednesday.