Groundhog Day is a North American tradition with roots in the February 2 Candlemas observance practiced by German immigrants. The most well-known Groundhog Day celebration, in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, was first promoted by a local newspaper editor in 1886. Thousands of people gather in Punxsutawney each year to witness the groundhog emerge from its burrow, and more importantly, to see if the critter spots its shadow. If it does, winter will go on for six weeks, according to tradition. If it does not, spring-like conditions are said to be coming. Studies have yet to prove any link between the two events, but that hasn’t cast a shadow over this unusual tradition, which remains as popular as ever in the 21st century.
Groundhog Day
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Borrego Badlands
-
St. Michaels Mount in Marazion, Cornwall, England
-
Atlantic puffin, Iceland
-
Beware the Ides of March
-
The Wave at Coyote Buttes
-
The dry days of winter in Etosha
-
Halo around the sun
-
We heart Berlin
-
Juneteenth
-
Behold the perfect cone
-
Land of the midnight sun
-
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California
-
Polar bear capital of the world
-
Floating market, Kaptai Lake, Bangladesh
-
’Chess on ice’
-
An emerald isle of the Emerald Isle
-
It s Computer Science Education Week
-
Sitting down and taking a stand
-
The Millennium at 20
-
Papa was a flightless bird
-
Blue linckia sea stars in Papua New Guinea
-
Happy International Beaver Day!
-
Jazzed for Mardi Gras
-
Jerte Valley in bloom
-
Puma in Patagonia
-
Daylight saving time
-
The city of Osaka at night, Japan
-
Old City of Dubrovnik in Dalmatia, Croatia
-
International Jazz Day
-
Rosa Parks Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

