Groundhog Day 2021: When Will Spring Weather Come To Healdsburg?

HEALDSBURG, CA — Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, is a long drive from Healdsburg, and that alone reduces the odds of jumping in the car and traveling there to see what the city’s famous marmot predicts about the end of winter on Groundhog Day on Tuesday.

According to the Groundhog Day legend, winter will hang on another six weeks if the rodent sees his shadow, and spring will be just around the corner if he doesn’t.

This unscientific ritual takes place every year in Punxsutawney, and it will again in 2021 — but without the crush of thousands of reporters and visitors who flock to Gobbler’s Knob, a small clearing at the top of a wooded hill a couple of miles outside of the western Pennsylvania town.

The pandemic hasn’t stolen this silly late-winter ritual, but it will move online because “the potential COVID risks to overcome are too great,” according to the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club website. That means you can watch Punxsutawney Phil’s prognostication from the comfort of your home here in Healdsburg.

The pampered groundhog will go outside with his “Inner Circle” to do his bit. In place of a crowd, Phil will be surrounded by cutouts of folks who would like to be there. Just snap a photo — preferably wearing groundhog gear, according to the website — and email it to director@ghogclub.com.

You may be asking how what is seen by a groundhog in Pennsylvania has to do with the end of winter in our neck of the woods. Fair enough. Right now, the National Weather Service forecast calls for a high near 56 with a chance of rain and partly sunny skies over Healdsburg on Groundhog Day.

Enterprising Punxsutawney residents organized the first Groundhog Day celebration in 1887 around a tradition that early 19th century settlers brought to Pennsylvania from Germany.

Clymer Freas, the editor of The Punxsutawney Spirit newspaper, came up with the idea in 1886 and convinced the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, a group of businessmen and groundhog hunters, that it was a solid one. They traded groundhogs for hedgehogs, the marmot used in the German celebration, but the idea behind the observance remains unchanged: If the varmint sees its shadow, more winter is in sight; if not, spring is near.

The earliest of Feb. 2 celebrations had nothing to do with groundhogs or hedgehogs. Today’s lighthearted festivals around marmots borrow heavily from the ancient European Christian celebration known as Candlemas Day, “commemorating the occasion when the Virgin Mary, in obedience to Jewish law, went to the Temple in Jerusalem both to be purified 40 days after the birth of her son, Jesus, and to present him to God as her firstborn (Luke 2:22–38),” according to Encyclopedia Britannica.

According to tradition, religious leaders blessed candles used during the winter and passed them out on Feb. 2, the midpoint between the winter solstice and spring equinox. If the candles were distributed under clear, sunny skies, the remainder of winter would be a rough ride. But if the day was gray and cloudy, spring was on the way.

Punxsutawney Phil was introduced at the inaugural U.S. Groundhog Day in 1887, and a groundhog has looked for its shadow every year under that name, sealing the “holiday” in our America’s cultural heritage. A groundhog was pulled from the ground that first year and saw its shadow on Gobbler’s Knob. The prediction was right for a few regions of Pennsylvania, but not the entire state.

The groundhog has gotten it wrong as often as right in the last 10 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. But give the varmint a break, NOAA says, noting on a webpage for all things Groundhog Day: “Predicting the arrival of spring for an entire country, especially one with such varied regional climates as the United States, isn’t easy!”

If you want a bit more accuracy, here’s what AccuWeather says about the arrival of spring weather in California:

As colder air settles across the northern tier in March, the southern half of the U.S. will see a prolonged spell of milder weather, with spring arriving as early as late February.

"We’ll see spring starting basically right out of the gate, so if Phil was looking at the weather down [in the Southwest] he probably will not see his shadow," said Dave Samuhel, a long-range forecaster for AccuWeather. "It may even begin to feel like spring as early as mid-to late February for places like Phoenix, Las Vegas and Los Angeles with no signs of cooling down in March."

This article originally appeared on the Healdsburg Patch