6 weeks until spring, or 6 more weeks of winter.
How can he be wrong?
/s
He’s got to be stopped, and I have to stop him.
“From 1969 on, Phil’s overall accuracy rate drops to about 36 percent...”
A negative correlation can be statistically significant, too. You could well simply by predicting the opposite of Phil.
The big ugly rat is wrong again......Now, that’s funny.
Oh....they weren’t referring to the Dems.
Why do we do this dumb a** stunt every year?
Did they drop and kill the little guy again like a couple years back?
Hey morons, it isn’t weather science. You think an animal can predict when spring comes? Sounds like morons who think man can cause Global Warming...
I’m surprised that nobody in the Gulf states has come up with an equally useless idea for Nutria.
(bonus) Nutria recipes:
https://www.foxnews.com/story/nutria-recipes
Nutria Fettuccini?
It’s just a little fun people. Lighten up.
I remember last year when the rodent’s prediction was wrong, there came a humorous joke of a news headline that there was an arrest warrant out for Punxsutawney Phil.
Given what the weather’s been in much of the country over the last week or so....if Punxsutawney Phil had seen his shadow and predicted 6 more weeks of winter, the crowd may have rioted, rushed the stage, and torn him to shreds.
He’s a groundhog:
The groundhog (Marmota monax), also known as a woodchuck, is a rodent of the family Sciuridae, belonging to the group of large ground squirrels known as marmots.[2] It was first scientifically described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758.[3] The groundhog is also referred to as a chuck, wood-shock, groundpig, whistlepig,[4][5] whistler, thickwood badger, Canada marmot, monax, moonack, weenusk, red monk[6] and, among French Canadians in eastern Canada, siffleux.[7] The name “thickwood badger” was given in the Northwest to distinguish the animal from the prairie badger. Monax (Móonack) is an Algonquian name of the woodchuck, which meant “digger” (cf. Lenape monachgeu).[8][9] Young groundhogs may be called chucklings.[10]:66 Other marmots, such as the yellow-bellied and hoary marmots, live in rocky and mountainous areas, but the groundhog is a lowland creature. It is found through much of the eastern United States across Canada and into Alaska[11]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundhog
He’s ugly enough to be cute.
Bert;
In your research studies on the predictive abilities of Wooly Worms did you ever find any groups of people who would get together early some morning to look at Wooly Worms and Drink?
Its a bit despicable that they named their weather service after a leftist terror group.