Children dig into the life of a groundhog at Ford Nature Center


By ALEXIS BARTOLOMUCCI

abartolomucci@vindy.com

Once per month, Ford Nature Center hosts a program for children about nature and the different animals in it. This month, the children learned about groundhogs on Feb. 5, just a few days after Groundhog’s Day.

Hillary Lenton, Mill Creek Park naturalist, taught the children all about groundhogs and their lifestyle. Lenton went over the different names for groundhogs, such as whistlepigs, groundhogs and woodchucks.

Groundhogs got the name whistlepig because they whistle to each other to show signs of danger.

The activity the children participated in this month was tunnel crawling. Lenton set up two tunnels for the children to crawl through like groundhogs would do in their tunnels they dig.

Several of the children returned to the tunnels to play in after the program was over.

“The children were crawling through the tunnels,” said Lenton. “The groundhogs dig their holes in the ground, they dig tunnels and move about 700 pounds of dirt and rocks in a day.”

To end the program, the children made little groundhogs on a stick to pop up from a small cup which represented the groundhog’s hole. When the children finished putting their craft together, Lenton whistled to show there was danger and the children popped their groundhogs in and out of their holes.

The next program will be about owls and will take place on March 10 at Pioneer Pavillion.

Mill Creek Parks will also be celebrating their 125th anniversary in April.

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