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It is known that the Wooly Worm Caterpillar is a good predictor of future winter weather. They are usually black on each end, with a big red band stretching across the middle. The size of the red band is typically a good predictor for how harsh the coming winter will be. The smaller the red band, the harsher the winter.

Pic rel is one i found just now. COMPLETELY FUCKING BLACK. This winter is going to be exceptionally harsh. Prepare yourselves accordingly

https://www.farmersalmanac.com/woolly-bear-caterpillar-facts-28792

How they normally look; https://pic8.co/sh/EbBG6U.png

>It is known that the Wooly Worm Caterpillar is a good predictor of future winter weather. They are usually black on each end, with a big red band stretching across the middle. The size of the red band is typically a good predictor for how harsh the coming winter will be. The smaller the red band, the harsher the winter. > >Pic rel is one i found just now. COMPLETELY FUCKING BLACK. This winter is going to be exceptionally harsh. Prepare yourselves accordingly > >https://www.farmersalmanac.com/woolly-bear-caterpillar-facts-28792 How they normally look; https://pic8.co/sh/EbBG6U.png

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[–] 3 pts

Those two pictures are not necessarily the same sub-species of Wooly Worm. Where I live, our Woolies don't develop any stripes no matter what the winter is going to be like, which is almost always quite mild. This is not a very good indicator or predictor of the harshness or winter. You and anon probably believe groundhogs can also predict the end of winter. Spoiler: they can't.

[–] 0 pt

Bring it on I cannot wait to put this thing into action. (renewenergies.com)