Groundhog Day 2025: Did Buckeye Chuck See His Shadow? Ohio’s Groundhog Declares that Spring is Coming (USAT)

Atta boy, Chuck! You GO groundhog! What does that crazy Pennsylvania rodent know anyway???

Punxsutawney Phil isn’t the only weather-predicting groundhog that enjoys a day of public spotlight. In northern Ohio, a ground-dweller by the name of Buckeye Chuck has made his call: Spring is coming.

Ohio’s weather-predicting groundhog issued a proclamation Sunday morning, declaring that an early spring is on the way.

Read it all and check out who’s right more often: Buckeye Chuck or Punxsutawney Phil?

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Groundhog Day 2025: Punxsutawney Phil Makes Annual Winter Weather Prediction (FN)

Pennsylvania’s “official state meteorologist” Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow Sunday morning, predicting six more weeks of winter.

Sunday’s joyous occasion was the 138th prognostication in Punxsutawney, located in Jefferson County. The festivities kicked off at 6 a.m. in a cold 20 degrees, and Phil made his appearance to the eager crowd at 7:22 a.m. It included singing, dancing, live music and fireworks to amp up the crowd ahead of Phil’s prediction. 

Gov. Josh Shapiro, D-Pa., spoke early on during the annual festivities at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney, Pa., rebuffing People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals’ (PETA) demands to replace the beloved animal with something vegan.

Read it all (and make sure you check out what a REAL Groundhog—Buckeye Chuck—predicted).

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Candlemas 2025: And Before There Ever Was Groundhog Day, There Was…

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…Candlemas, a Christian holiday that remembers when Mary presented the Christ child at the Temple in Jerusalem and performed her purification (see below). Candlemas is also called the Festival Day of Candles, in which the parish priest would bless candles for use in the local church for the coming year and would occasionally send some of them home with his parishioners for them to use. It is one of the earliest known feasts to be celebrated by the Church.

Candlemas falls 40 days from the birth of Jesus because that is the day Mary would have completed her purification process as prescribed by the Law, which means that Candlemas always falls on February 2. It is the midpoint between the winter solstice and spring equinox and before there ever was a Groundhog Day (also observed on February 2), tradition held that when Candlemas fell on a sunny day, there was more winter to come. But when it fell on a cloudy, wet, or stormy day, it meant that the worst of winter was over. Check out the two Candlemas poems below and see if you recognize anything familiar in them:

If Candlemas be fair and bright,
Come, Winter, have another flight;
If Candlemas brings clouds and rain,
Go Winter, and come not again.
(Anonymous English poem)

If Candlemas day be dry and fair,
The half o’ winter to come and mair,
If Candlemas day be wet and foul,
The half of winter’s gone at Yule.
(Anonymous Scottish poem)

For you Christmas junkies out there, tradition also holds that any Christmas decorations not taken down by Twelfth Night (January 5) should be left up until Candlemas and then taken down. Candlemas also officially marks the end of the Christmas and Epiphany seasons, seasons in which the Church celebrates Christ as being the light to the world.

Now you know.

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Candlemas 2025: An Ancient Account of How Candlemas was Celebrated in the Fourth Century

The Fortieth Day after Epiphany [Candlemas, February 14] is observed here with special magnificence, On this day they assemble in the Anastasis [Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem]. Everyone gathers, and things are done with the same solemnity as at the feast of Easter. All the presbyters [priests] preach first, then the bishop, and they interpret the passage from the Gospel about Joseph and Mary taking the Lord to the Temple, and about Simeon and the prophetess Anna, daughter of Phanuel, seeing the Lord, and what they said to him, and about the sacrifice offered by his parents. When all the rest has been done in the proper way, they celebrate the sacrament and have their dismissal.

—Egeria, Abbess, Pilgrimage 26: SC 296, 254-256

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