Posted on 02/04/2011 3:57:52 AM PST by speciallybland
Politics, step aside. The Truth-O-Meter must address a matter of Southern pride.
The honor and reputation of our local groundhog General Beauregard Lee.
For three decades, the Souths most esteemed weather prognosticator has lived in the stout and lumpy shadow of Punxsutawney Phil.
Phil makes the rounds yearly on the morning talk shows. Hes made appearances with Oprah Winfrey and President Ronald Reagan. His agent even scored him a gig with Bill Murray in the 1993 movie "Groundhog Day."
On Wednesday, PolitiFact Georgia scribes rolled our eyes as the public fawned over Phil once again during Wednesdays annual Groundhog Day celebration. Phil never saw his shadow, news accounts said. Spring will come early.
But should you really trust Phil? Beaus website says our metro Atlanta celebrity is accurate 94 percent of the time. Phils record is a measly 85 percent, it said. That stat has been picked up by various news outlets.
Does Beau really deserve second place to that Yankee glory hog?
PolitiFact Georgia decided to settle this matter once and for all.
For the scoop on Beaus record, we talked to Art Rilling, CEO and founder of Lilburns Yellow River Game Ranch, an attraction featuring people-friendly wildlife northeast of Atlanta. Beau lives there in a plantation-style manse named "Weathering Heights." For the past 10 years, his staff has calculated the Generals accuracy by noting the number of days local temperatures hit the freezing mark during the six weeks after Feb. 2.
Beau, like Phil, predicted an early spring for 2011.
Sadly, Phils staff has not tracked their groundhogs predictions so diligently. Their official stance is that their marmot is "incapable of error, so his accuracy rate is 100 percent," said Mike Johnston, vice president of the Inner Circle of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club.
Wednesday was Punxsutawneys 125th groundhog celebration. German settlers brought the tradition, which is based on ancient myths that say hedgehogs, which resemble groundhogs, have the power to predict the weather.
Phils predictions are not site-specific. If he says that spring will come early, it will, Johnston said. Somewhere.
When Phils really wrong, Johnston added, its the fault of poor Groundhogeese-to-English translation.
"People complain and tell us were just making it up as we go along," Johnston said, "but after 125 years of doing it, we dont need to."
Before we go further, the staff of PolitiFact Georgia feels obliged to mention that meteorologists have officially determined that groundhogs cannot predict the weather.
Really. A tongue-in-cheek analysis by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations National Climatic Data Center concluded groundhogs show "no predictive skill." (Why do this? To help get kids interested in the science of weather.)
Or, more bluntly, "you cant take any stock in a groundhog predicting the weather," said Tom Ross, a meteorologist who helped put together the NCDCs report. It showed that between 1988 and 2010, Phil gave accurate national weather predictions 10 times out of 23 for a rate of 43 percent.
True, but that wont stop us. Our groundhogs honor is at stake.
Since the keepers of Beau and Phil do not keep comparable statistics, we performed an independent analysis using the NCDC study and National Weather Service data for 2001 through 2010.
We defined "early spring" as a February with above-average temperatures. We then compared each groundhogs prediction with temperatures nationally and in his respective hometown.
The NWS does not keep average February temperatures for the hamlet of Punxsutawney, Pa., so a kindly meteorologist gave us figures for Putneyville, Pa., a town at a similar elevation about 15 miles away.
We found that the General predicted whether spring will start early nationally with 60 percent accuracy. Phils rate was 30 percent.
Beau predicted Atlanta weather with 50 percent accuracy. Phil got Punxsutawneys right 40 percent of the time.
By our analysis, Beaus staff overestimated his success, but hes still 10 to 30 percentage points ahead of Phil. Georgias underhog is the champion, paws down.
General, emerge from the shadows. Stand tall on your stubby legs.
The Truth-O-Meter salutes you with a Mostly True.
Put them in the same hole and let them have at it!
Faith in a rodent is the equivalent of voting Democrat.
For what it’s worth, it is a BIT of s stretch to say this ‘game ranch’ (nice petting zoo really) is “Metro Atlanta.” Lilburn *IS* a commuting suburb of the ATL, but when you are in Lilburn, you are pretty much unaware the stink-hole of the city of Atlanta is near you.
The game ranch is about 5 miles due east of Stone Mountain, and for those of you who fly IN to ATL, you can see it from the air when landing from the east. Of course you can see Stone Mountain, but if you know where to look you can see the game ranch.
But at any rate, Gen. Lee *HAS* been better at this than his Yankee counterparts.
And another thing, more people can correctly spell Atlanta than Punxsutawney.
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