Meat's in the cupboard and butter's in the churn,As a result of the ADHD I seem to have acquired upon my retirement from my day job, a casual interest in Candlemas took me off on an investigation of, among other really interesting things, wildlife weather prediction, the presentation of Jesus at the Temple, activity patterns of Marmota monax, purification of the Virgin Mary, the meaning of 'Imbolc', the relative advantages of beeswax vs. tallow candles, and old-timey music. I don't know how this always happens.
Meat's in the cupboard and butter's in the churn,
If that ain't groundhog, I'll be durned.
Old groundhog
Marmots are really cool little creatures, though. I don't know why they're called woodchucks, but whistle-pig or land-beaver conjures up quite a picture, doesn't it? Back in my biologist days, I remember being (fleetingly) envious of people whose research subject was diurnal, and active right out in the open. You could just sit there and watch them. Would that be cool, or what? Of course, taking a blood sample from a nocturnal, secretive, 1 ounce deer mouse was a lot easier than wrestling with an unhappy 13 pound ground squirrel with incisors like, well, like a rodent. I'm doing it again, aren't I?
Anyway, here we are. Halfway between the winter solstice and the vernal equinox. Forty-five days, 5 hours, 30 minutes, and 30 seconds (and counting) till spring. As much as I like marmots, their take on today's weather won't get it here any quicker. It'll get here when it gets here. In 45 days, and change.
Little piece of cornbread layin' on the shelf,
Little piece of cornbread layin' on the shelf,
If you want to hear more you can sing it yourself,
Old groundhog.
Medildodayeetonandahydeldodawhare
ReplyDeleteMedildodayeetonandahydeldodawhare
Medildodayeetonandahydeldodawhare
(I like to say that.)
Too damned long.
DeleteWhen you stop and think about it, aren't both predictions pretty much the same? P. Phil sees his shadow, and we have six more weeks of winter (six times seven equals 42 days, so we're just around that vernal equinox.) He doesn't see his shadow, and we have an early spring (like in mid-March? Duhhh, the equinox, again.)
ReplyDeleteHe's a silly predictor -- it'll stay cold until April, I'm sure!
Cute song!
Peace,
Muff