Letter: Willie Had the Best Gig in Bruce County
A letter to the editor pushes back on PETA’s call to replace Wiarton Willie, using humour to defend the groundhog’s well-cared-for life in Wiarton.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor,
Some Grey-Bruce readers may have missed an unusual letter recently sent by the animal-rights group PETA to the mayor of South Bruce Peninsula.
Following the passing of Wiarton Willie this month, PETA suggested the town retire the tradition of using a live groundhog and instead replace him with a hologram, a robot, or even children dressed up as the famous weather-predicting rodent.
Now let’s be honest about the life poor Willie actually had.
A warm bed.
Protected fencing.
A steady food supply.
And an annual festival in his honour.
As an albino groundhog in the wild, Willie might just as easily have been singled out by his brown-furred peers, or worse, mistaken for a crop-destroying varmint and flattened under the tires of a passing F-150 somewhere along the Bruce Peninsula.
Yet into this comfortable rodent retirement steps PETA, lamenting Willie’s supposed captivity — what most of us might call hotel accommodations. Their rallying cry now seems to be “Free Willie!” and replace him with a hologram or robotic look-alike.
But I have to ask: do holograms actually see their shadows?
And I’m not entirely convinced a robotic Willie would hold up very well through a Bruce County winter. One good February snow squall and we’ll be sending technicians out with jumper cables and a hair dryer.
Then there’s the suggestion that local children compete in costume to become the next Wiarton Willie look-alike. I can only imagine the confusion when a dozen small groundhogs in parkas step onto the stage and try to predict the weather.
Now, I say all this with a bit of humour. PETA raises meaningful concerns about factory farming and genuine abuse of animals — causes well worth fighting for. But when an organization spends this much time worrying about the emotional well-being of a well-fed Bruce County groundhog, it risks turning a serious message into self-parody.
In truth, Willie probably had the best deal any groundhog ever got. Warm quarters, regular meals, and the admiration of half the province every February.
If PETA truly wants to improve the welfare of animals, there are factory barns and slaughterhouses full of creatures who would gladly trade places with Wiarton Willie.
Because around here we know the difference between rescuing animals — and rescuing a perfectly happy groundhog from a pretty comfortable hole.
Sincerely,
David Wood
Mildmay
Letters to the Editor do not necessarily reflect the opinions or beliefs of The Owen Sound Current and its editor or publisher.



