The prediction ceremony draws an early-morning festive crowd of about 200 families and visitors to the wildlife park, sometimes heralded by a groundhog mascot,
bagpiper and
town crier.[2] The wildlife park, usually only open on weekends in the winter, changes its seasonal hours to open especially for the annual ritual.[3] Shubenacadie Sam predicted an early spring in 2024.[4]
History
Nova Scotian Groundhog Day traditions arrived with German
Foreign Protestant immigrants in the 1750s who settled around
Lunenburg where the day was known as "Daks Day" (from the German dachs for badger) after the belief that badgers could predict the coming of spring on February 2.[5][6] The Shubenacadie Sam tradition at the wildlife park began about 1987 and differs from most other famous groundhogs as he is not woken from hibernation for Groundhog Day.[7] By 2018, four ground hogs had served as "Shubenacadie Sam" since the practice began in Nova Scotia, as groundhogs usually live 10-15 years in captivity.[8] In 2021, a 7-year-old female groundhog, "Samantha", assumed the prediction duties.[9] Park employees have served as the caretaker for Shubenacadie Sam and the park's groundhogs for over 20 years. They provide breakfast for the groundhog, usually yogurt and melon. Staff also read to the groundhog who has been designated an advocate for Family Literacy Day. Shubenacadie Sam inspired a children's book in 2022.[10] Pages of the book are displayed around the park offering visitors a groundhog tour of the park. The ceremony was held virtually by web streaming during the
COVID-19 pandemic in 2021 and 2022 but live gatherings resumed in 2023.[11]
Biting incident
In 2018, Sam bit the finger of
CBC reporter Brett Ruskin when the reporter grabbed the groundhog to stop Sam from climbing out of the groundhog enclosure.[12]
Predictions
Shubenacadie Sam's prediction, like all weather-predicting groundhogs, bears little relation to seasonal weather trends as it is based on random location conditions, according to
Meteorologist Cindy Day. Shubenacadie Sam has an accuracy rate of about 45%, according to Day, compared to 39% for Punxsutawney Phil and 25% for Wiarton Willie.[13]
While Shubenacadie offers the earliest prediction every year, it is one of many towns throughout North America known for their winter-predicting groundhogs. The most famous is
Punxsutawney Phil of
Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, United States. The most famous Canadian groundhog is
Wiarton Willie in
Ontario, Canada. Sam shares the Nova Scotia prediction every year with "Two Rivers Tunnel" in
Cape Breton at the Two Rivers Wildlife Park in
Mira River, Nova Scotia, although "Two Rivers Tunnel" is awakened for its prediction just after 11 am instead of 8 am.[34] Promoters of a lobster festival in
Barrington Passage, Nova Scotia created a "Lucy the Lobster" ritual in 2018 with a lobster that crawled from the water to a lobster trap on Groundhog Day.[35]