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2nd February 11, 11:52 AM
#1
Well, I have to fly to Chicago in two weeks. I hope no other big snow thing comes around the corner while I'm up there.
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2nd February 11, 12:02 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Jack Daw
Well, I have to fly to Chicago in two weeks. I hope no other big snow thing comes around the corner while I'm up there.
As somebody who relies on gratuities to make ends meet (I drive a shuttle bus for one of the rental agencies at the Memphis airport); I also want the snow to go away. All the flight cancelations are definitely affecting my spending power.
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2nd February 11, 12:17 PM
#3
I am concerned about all of my friends who are bartenders and waiters/waitresses...with the city basically shut down, they're gonna have a rather thin week.
I had hoped to get up to the Duke of Perth one afternoon this week to have a pint and a burger and shoot the breeze with Kim the bartender-ess but no way I'm getting up there.
My dear son is now living within walking distance of the Duke and I expect that he'll wander over there to see if they're open, though. So if I can't make it, I can at least count on my emissary.
Best
AA
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2nd February 11, 02:33 PM
#4
please explain all this groundhog, woodchuck, shadow, winter spring thing?
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2nd February 11, 02:49 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by Jimmy
please explain all this groundhog, woodchuck, shadow, winter spring thing?
It's origins are in Scotland and the Pennsylvania Germans, who introduced the custom of a badger or groundhog being the prognosticator of weather:
If Candlemass day be dry and fair,
The half o' winter's to come and mair;
If Candlemass day be wet and foul,
The half o' winter's gave at Yule.'
-- http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/feb/2.htm
T.
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2nd February 11, 03:01 PM
#6
 Originally Posted by cajunscot
It's origins are in Scotland and the Pennsylvania Germans, who introduced the custom of a badger or groundhog being the prognosticator of weather:
If Candlemass day be dry and fair,
The half o' winter's to come and mair;
If Candlemass day be wet and foul,
The half o' winter's gave at Yule.'
-- http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/feb/2.htm
T.
thanks for your info here
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3rd February 11, 01:59 AM
#7
I watched the first couple minutes of The Daily Show last night. They showed a photoshopped picture of the officiator in Punxatawney (Pennsylvania town that started "groundhog day") holding up Phil (the groundhog in question), but frozen in a block of ice.
I wish I believed in reincarnation. Where's Charles Martel when you need him?
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2nd February 11, 02:59 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by Jimmy
please explain all this groundhog, woodchuck, shadow, winter spring thing?
CajunScot gave the background, here is the foreground:
On February 2, the groundhog, a North American marmot more properly named the woodchuck, emerges from underground hibernation and appears at the entrance of his burrow. If he sees his shadow, he ducks back inside and there will be another six weeks of winter. If there is no shadow, he ducks back inside and winter will be over "soon", within six weeks or so. It's true!
A village in Pennsylvania which I will not even attempt to spell actually started a festival around the tradition, where strange men in top hats rip a poor animal out of his cage and pass him around like a baby, a dangerously well-toothed baby. Also true! This bizarre practice was the basis of the unexpectedly good Bill Murray movie, Groundhog Day.
Wiarton, a town in Ontario, as well as several other towns around the continent, have started up with rival captive woodchucks and have their own festivals. The Wiarton animal is traditionally an albino, which I actually prefer due to the fact that they have even poorer eyesight than a fully melinated 'chuck and are therefore less likely to see anything, never mind their shadow.
Now you have to explain Alexi Sayle!
Last edited by Lallans; 2nd February 11 at 03:08 PM.
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3rd February 11, 03:57 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by Canuck of NI
CajunScot gave the background, here is the foreground:
On February 2, the groundhog, a North American marmot more properly named the woodchuck, emerges from underground hibernation and appears at the entrance of his burrow. If he sees his shadow, he ducks back inside and there will be another six weeks of winter. If there is no shadow, he ducks back inside and winter will be over "soon", within six weeks or so. It's true!
A village in Pennsylvania which I will not even attempt to spell actually started a festival around the tradition, where strange men in top hats rip a poor animal out of his cage and pass him around like a baby, a dangerously well-toothed baby. Also true! This bizarre practice was the basis of the unexpectedly good Bill Murray movie, Groundhog Day.
Wiarton, a town in Ontario, as well as several other towns around the continent, have started up with rival captive woodchucks and have their own festivals. The Wiarton animal is traditionally an albino, which I actually prefer due to the fact that they have even poorer eyesight than a fully melinated 'chuck and are therefore less likely to see anything, never mind their shadow.
Now you have to explain Alexi Sayle!
Fascinating stuff, thanks for telling me, even more fanciable than our own wee haggis
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3rd February 11, 11:59 AM
#10
 Originally Posted by Canuck of NI
CajunScot gave the background, here is the foreground:
On February 2, the groundhog, a North American marmot more properly named the woodchuck, emerges from underground hibernation and appears at the entrance of his burrow. If he sees his shadow, he ducks back inside and there will be another six weeks of winter. If there is no shadow, he ducks back inside and winter will be over "soon", within six weeks or so. It's true!
A village in Pennsylvania which I will not even attempt to spell actually started a festival around the tradition, where strange men in top hats rip a poor animal out of his cage and pass him around like a baby, a dangerously well-toothed baby. Also true! This bizarre practice was the basis of the unexpectedly good Bill Murray movie, Groundhog Day.
Wiarton, a town in Ontario, as well as several other towns around the continent, have started up with rival captive woodchucks and have their own festivals. The Wiarton animal is traditionally an albino, which I actually prefer due to the fact that they have even poorer eyesight than a fully melinated 'chuck and are therefore less likely to see anything, never mind their shadow.
Now you have to explain Alexi Sayle!
Hmmm....the woodchuck/ground hog/whistle pig is not a protected species in the U.S., which begs the question: Has anyone made a sporran out of one?
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