…a lot of people remember what the groundhog saw. Especially if it’s early spring. And I think we’re having that right now, what with all the buds on the trees and such.
Some of the kids might remember. Presumably, any celebrating they do of St. Patrick’s Day will be in an adult manner, while the adults are celebrating it in an infantile manner.
The idea is that a sunny day on groundhog’s day is indicative of a longer winter. It does not matter the animal that sees his shadow or not, only the prevalence of shadows.
The idea is that a sunny day on February 2nd was indicative of a longer window while a cloudy day was indicative that spring was on its way. After I learned this, I started paying attention and learned real quick that a sunny day did not indicate at all what the meteorologists said the groundhog saw. And they have a horrible record of prognostication. I wonder if they followed the old farmer’s tale, if they would have been more accurate.
Six weeks after St. Patrick’s Day, everyone’s looking forward to May Day or Beltane. (Six weeks after St. Patrick’s Day this year, some of us will be looking forward to putting the matzoh aside and eating food that tastes good again.)
With his penchant for obscure trivia, I’m surprised that Caulfield (who is owned by a cat) hasn’t mentioned St. Gertrude of Nivelles, patron saint of cats and cat lovers, whose day is also March 17th. (Patrick gets all the glory.)
diazch408 8 months ago
Except for Caufield and Frazz.
thevideostoreguy 8 months ago
…a lot of people remember what the groundhog saw. Especially if it’s early spring. And I think we’re having that right now, what with all the buds on the trees and such.
Bilan 8 months ago
On St Patrick’s Day, people worry more about tripping over their own shadow.
Botulism Bob 8 months ago
St. Patrick’s Day wouldn’t be the same without shenanigans.
sandpiper 8 months ago
Mrs. Olsen and Caulfield have more in common than they realized. Scary.
markkahler52 8 months ago
Punxatawney Phil guards his gold very carefully!
Ichabod Ferguson 8 months ago
Her first mistake, asking “so?”
HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member 8 months ago
I’ve forgotten it already.
goboboyd 8 months ago
Perhaps in a decade or so you two can discuss it over a beverage.
jessegooddoggy 8 months ago
LOVE it when they get along!! Classic, and the colors today are beautiful.
eced52 8 months ago
Caulfield and Mrs. Olson agreeing on something? Stop the presses.
grocks 8 months ago
Love this one!
Slowly, he turned... 8 months ago
Remember what?
prrdh 8 months ago
Some of the kids might remember. Presumably, any celebrating they do of St. Patrick’s Day will be in an adult manner, while the adults are celebrating it in an infantile manner.
Mike Baldwin creator 8 months ago
They’ll both remember this moment forever and take it to their Graves.
DM2860 8 months ago
The idea is that a sunny day on groundhog’s day is indicative of a longer winter. It does not matter the animal that sees his shadow or not, only the prevalence of shadows.
DM2860 8 months ago
The idea is that a sunny day on February 2nd was indicative of a longer window while a cloudy day was indicative that spring was on its way. After I learned this, I started paying attention and learned real quick that a sunny day did not indicate at all what the meteorologists said the groundhog saw. And they have a horrible record of prognostication. I wonder if they followed the old farmer’s tale, if they would have been more accurate.
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member 8 months ago
Six weeks after St. Patrick’s Day, everyone’s looking forward to May Day or Beltane. (Six weeks after St. Patrick’s Day this year, some of us will be looking forward to putting the matzoh aside and eating food that tastes good again.)
TheWildSow 8 months ago
Yeah, Groundhog Day (Candlemas) is a cross-quarter day — approximately halfway between a solstice and an equinox. I.e., just about 6 weeks.
The others are Beltane (May Day), Lammas (August 1), and Samhain (Halloween!)
Cactus-Pete 8 months ago
There’s never been a reason to check those “predictions”. Another bad assumption.
DKHenderson 8 months ago
With his penchant for obscure trivia, I’m surprised that Caulfield (who is owned by a cat) hasn’t mentioned St. Gertrude of Nivelles, patron saint of cats and cat lovers, whose day is also March 17th. (Patrick gets all the glory.)
Lambutts 8 months ago
After Steve Lyons did this, he said something about “in XX years, no one is going to care that I did that.” >