B.C.'s groundhogs are too sleepy to predict the end of winter, so this stuffed animal will do the job - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C.'s groundhogs are too sleepy to predict the end of winter, so this stuffed animal will do the job

Who doesn't want six more weeks of sleep?

Okanagan Okie is presiding over Vernon's inaugural Groundhog Day celebrations this year

Okanagan Okie stands atop "Marmot City," a rocky knoll overlooking the North Okanagan Valley near Vernon, B.C., at the Allan Brooks Nature Centre. Dozens of real marmots are hibernating in the grounds below. (Cheryl Hood)

A B.C. wildlife centre has turned to a stuffed animal to predict the end of winter this Groundhog Day because all of the real animals are too sleepy to do the job.

The grounds surrounding the Allan Brooks Nature Centre in B.C.'s North Okanagan Valley near Vernon arehome to many yellow-bellied marmots, a type of groundhog found throughout southwestern Canada.

That would make itthe perfect place for a Groundhog Day celebration if not for the fact that, comeFeb.2, they're all still hibernating underground.

"We're not going to wake them up," said centre manager Cherly Hood. "As a nature centre, we feel they should be sleeping at this time."

Instead, the centre is using Okanagan Okie, a stuffed animal dubbed the "mayor of Marmot City" to draw attention to the work it doeseducating residents about wildlife and habitat preservation in the Okanagan including the region's many marmots.

"It's a bit of fun," Hood said.

'Who doesn't like to sleep in?'

Groundhog Day celebrations are major events in other parts of North America. The most well-known of the real animals to do the job is inPunxsutawney, Pa., which draws up to 20,000 visitors annually eager to find out if the city's official groundhog will see its shadow, thus predicting another six weeks of winter or, if no shadow is seen, an early spring.

In Canada, similar celebrations are held with Ontario's Wiarton Willie, Nova Scotia's Shubenacadie SamandQuebec's Fred la Marmotte.

There are other fakes as well:Manitoba's Mervis a puppet whileAlberta's Balzac Billyis a six-foot tall sunglass wearing mascot who uses his thumb to check for a shadow.

There has been at least one other attempt to add aB.C. groundhog to that list. On Vancouver Island, the Marmot Recovery Foundationgave the job to Van Island Violet, an endangered Vancouver Island marmotwho lives on Mount Washington.

A yellow-bellied marmot perches on a rock with its face raised to the sun.
Yellow-bellied marmots typically hibernate from September to March, meaning they sleep through all the Groundhog Day festivities. (Submitted by Cheryl Hood/Allan Brooks Nature Centre)

But, like the yellow-bellied marmots of Vernon, Violet tends to be asleep on Feb. 2, which, as the centre says, makes it difficult to see her shadow.

"This makes sense of course, and highlights a danger of asking a groundhog in the first place," the foundation tweeted last year. "More winter just means a sleep-in for the marmots, and who doesn't like to sleep in?"

With files from David Nadalini