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Ground Hog
Day
February 2nd

Groundhog, woodchuck
-- what's the difference?
Woodchuck and groundhog
are common terms for the same animal, the rodent with
the scientific name of Marmota monax. Most
closely related to squirrels, woodchucks actually can
climb trees and also swim.
What's so special
about Feb. 2?
Celestially speaking,
Groundhog Day on Feb. 2 is a "cross-quarter" day, about
halfway between the winter solstice in December and the
vernal equinox in March, and is celebrated in some
cultures as the midpoint of winter. It's not far from
the time many groundhogs end their hibernation anyway,
around the second week of February.
What's going on in
that burrow?
In the winter, not
much. Groundhogs go into profound hibernation, greatly
reducing their metabolic rate, and their body
temperature drops to just a few degrees above ambient
temperature. Because their hibernaculum, the deepest
portion of the burrow where they hibernate, is below
frost line, that produces a body temperature as low as
39-40 degrees F.
What's the wake-up
call?
The groundhog's
internal clock is believed to be affected by annual
changes in the amount of daylight. Hormonal responses to
cyclic changes in production of melatonin, a
sleep-related hormone, are thought by some to be the
signal to wake up.
Why did groundhog
fur coats go out of fashion?
Groundhog fur never was
in vogue, partly because it is not particularly thick
and warm, and because the fur's grizzled grey-brown
appearance is more appealing to others of their species
than to people. Groundhog hairs are used for tying trout
flies, such as the 'Chuck Caddis, and early American
Indians once used sturdy woodchuck hides for soles of
moccasins.
What's for dinner?
Groundhogs in the wild
eat succulent green plants, such as dandelion greens,
clover, plantain and grasses. They also are tempted by
nearby garden vegetables. At Cornell, they dine on Agway
Woodchuck Chow, a similar formulation to rabbit feed but
in larger-sized pellets. Woodchucks binge and
purposefully put on weight in the summer, reaching their
maximum mass in late August. They become lethargic and
prepare for hibernation in October. By February,
hibernating woodchucks have lost as much as half their
body weight.
How much wood could
a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
About 700 pounds.
Compared to beavers, groundhogs/woodchucks are not adept
at moving timber, although some will chew wood. (At
Cornell, woodchucks that gnaw their wooden nest boxes
are given scraps of 2-by-4 lumber.) A wildlife biologist
once measured the inside volume of a typical woodchuck
burrow and estimated that -- if wood filled the hole
instead of dirt -- the industrious animal would have
chucked about 700 pounds' worth.
Sources: College of
Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University; New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation;
Mammals of the Eastern
United States, Second Edi tion, William J. Hamilton
Jr. and John O. Whitaker Jr.
Here's a Little Groundhog
"I'm a Little Teapot"
Here's a little groundhog
Furry and brown
He's coming up
To look around
If he sees his shadow
Down he goes
Then six more weeks
Of winter snows.
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Mr. Groundhog's Shadow
A groundhog lives down deep in the ground.
He Sleeps through the winter.
And every year about this time,
He wakes up and wonders,
"Is it time to get out of bed
Or pull the covers back over my head?"
So he pokes his head up out of the ground.
Will he see his shadow?
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Fun on Groundhog Day
(by Barbara Walker)
There are shadows you make in the sunshine,
There are shadows you make by the lamp,
There are shadows that lurk in the forest
While you tell creepy stories at camp.
There are shadows that help you with
puppets,
And shadows ;you make just for play,
But the shadow that's famous is
Groundhog's,
When he tells whether winter's to stay.
Let's go out very early this morning
And watch for his shadow, my son;
It may not be at all scientific,
But you've got to admit that it's fun!
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Each student gets their
shadow drawn! We sit in a circle
and guess who's shadow is hiding!
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