Groundhog or woodchuck? Actually, it's a whistle pig — and it predicts 6 more weeks of winter
Winnipeg Wyn, Manitoba Merv make conflicting predictions about how long winter will linger
A woodchuck named Winnipeg Wyn predicted her city will get at least another six weeks of winter weather during a Groundhog Day ceremony at Fort Whyte Alive Friday morning.
But wait, you might say. What's a woodchuck doing making predictions on Groundhog Day?
"She's actually both. A woodchuck is a groundhog," Sheila Smith, co-founder of the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre, said in an interview on CBC's Information Radio.
Groundhogs have also been called whistle pigs, said Smith, who is Winnipeg Wyn's handler.
"They have a very shrieky loud screech when they're threatened or feel in danger. They will scream out and warn the other woodchucks in the neighbourhood," she said.
Wyn's prediction is at odds with another Manitoba weather prognosticator. Groundhog puppet Manitoba Merv, at Oak Hammock Marsh, called for an early spring.
Instead of the traditional prediction method of watching to see whether Wyn sees her shadow and runs back into her hole, thus signalling six more weeks of winter, Smith's group focused on her behaviour in her enclosure.
A lethargic Wyn signalled a longer winter, while an active woodchuck would have suggested a shorter winter.
Smith said there is a lot humans can learn by observing animals.
"It teaches us about the animal, what it needs, as well as the environment the animal lives in," she said.
We look for robins arriving in spring and geese heading south in the fall for indications about coming changes in the weather, for example, she said.
For those who missed her at Fort Whyte Alive, Wyn will visit the Children's Museum from noon to 4 p.m.
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With files from Information Radio