Wiarton Willie Statue in Wiarton, Ontario
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June 3, 2026
Every February 2nd, the small Georgian Bay town of Wiarton gathers before dawn to consult one of Canada’s most unlikely celebrities: a groundhog named Wiarton Willie. If Willie sees his shadow, tradition warns of six more weeks of winter. If he does not, spring is supposedly just around the corner. In a country where winter often feels endless, thousands still take the prediction remarkably seriously.
The tradition supposedly began in 1956 after local resident Mac McKenzie invited friends to a Groundhog Day party at the town hotel. Most ignored the invitation, but a reporter from the Toronto Daily Star made the journey north expecting a genuine festival. Upon arriving, the reporter discovered there was no organised event at all and faced the prospect of returning to Toronto empty-handed to an unimpressed editor. Thinking quickly, McKenzie improvised. A fur hat was tossed into a snowbank to stand in for a groundhog, a prediction was declared, a photograph was taken, and an enduring Canadian tradition was accidentally born.
Over the decades, several different groundhogs have taken on the mantle of “Wiarton Willie,” inheriting both celebrity status and the dubious responsibility of outperforming trained meteorologists. The town has fully embraced its furry forecaster. Giant statues of Willie stand around Wiarton, local businesses display his likeness, and every February the community hosts parades, pancake breakfasts, fireworks, and elaborate ceremonies culminating in Willie’s prediction.
Today, Wiarton Willie remains equal parts folk tradition, tourism spectacle, and beloved Canadian absurdity: a tiny rodent entrusted with determining the fate of an entire season.
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