February 2 Groundhog Day #GroundhogDay & February 2 National Hedgehog Day #HedgehogDay

Children's Book Reviews Holidays Homeschool Resources

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When Charlie was #Homeschooling full time he loved learning about #Holiday and different #animals. Even though Charlie has graduated I couldn’t wait to tell Charlie about 2 unique holidays that happened February 2 Groundhog Day #GroundhogDay & February 2 National Hedgehog Day #HedgehogDay.

February 2 – Groundhog Day#GroundhogDay

The question everyone is asking on February 2nd is will we get six more weeks of Winter or an early Spring? Let your friends and family know Groundhog Day brings a playful bit of folklore to the calendar every year on February 2nd. Families across the Country tune in to see whether the famous Groundhog spots his shadow, turning a simple tradition into a fun mid‑Winter moment of suspense.

Groundhog Day is a lighthearted way to spark conversations with kids about Weather, Seasons, and traditions. Groundhog Day is a great excuse to enjoy cozy treats while waiting for the “forecast.”

Fun Ways to Celebrate

  • Let your children make a simple Groundhog craft using paper plates or brown construction paper.
  • Gather your friends and family for a “shadow hunt” outside or indoors with flashlights.
  • gather your children and read a children’s book about Weather or Hibernation. or Groundhog Day! (New & updated) by Gail Gibbons (Author)
  • Share a themed snack — Chocolate Pudding “dirt cups” with Gummy Worms are always a hit or you can make Cookies using Groundhog Cookie Cutters.
  • Ask your family to make their own predictions before the Groundhog does and create a poll to see what answer gets the most vote and discuss why.

February 2 — National Hedgehog Day#HedgehogDay

Happy National Hedgehog Day! Today’s homeschool lesson we learn all about these adorable, spiky little creatures. We will explore hedgehog facts, read stories, create crafts, and even make a Hedgehog snack.

National Hedgehog Day celebrates one of nature’s most charming little creatures. Did you know long before Groundhog Day became the American tradition, ancient Europeans looked to Hedgehogs to predict the arrival of Spring. Today, the holiday is all about appreciating these spiky, sweet animals and sharing a bit of joy.

Fun Ways to Celebrate

  • Share adorable Hedgehog facts with your readers
  • Post a kid‑friendly craft or coloring page inspired by Hedgehogs
  • Highlight hedgehog‑themed snacks or treats
  • Add a fun comparison between Hedgehog Day and Groundhog Day for an educational twist

Quick Fun Fact

Hedgehogs can roll into a tight little ball thanks to over 5,000 tiny spines that protect them from predators.

National Hedgehog Day Homeschool Lesson PlanFebruary 2 • #HedgehogDay

Learning Objectives

  • Understand basic Hedgehog biology and behavior
  • Explore the history and folklore behind Hedgehog Day
  • Practice reading comprehension and creative writing
  • Apply math skills through themed activities
  • Create a Hedgehog‑inspired craft or recipe
  • Build curiosity and observation skills

1. Warm‑Up: What Is a Hedgehog? (Science)

Mini‑Lesson

  • Hedgehogs are small Mammals with 5,000–7,000 quills
  • They curl into a ball for protection
  • They are nocturnal and insectivores
  • Found in Europe, Asia, and Africa — not native to the U.S.

Activity: Hedgehog Fact Sort Create cards with facts and non‑facts (e.g., “Hedgehogs can shoot their quills,” “Hedgehogs eat insects”). Kids sort them into True or False piles.

Extension: Watch a short kid‑friendly video about Hedgehogs and list 3 new things learned.

2. Reading & Literature: Choose a Hedgehog‑themed book such as:

  • Hedgehogs (nonfiction children’s book)
  • The Hat by Jan Brett (features a hedgehog character)
  • Hedgehog Needs a Hug by Jen Betton

Activity

Character Traits Chart Kids identify:

  • What the hedgehog does
  • How the hedgehog feels
  • What problems it faces
  • How it solves them

3. Writing Activity: Choose one:

Creative Writing Prompt

“Imagine you wake up and discover a hedgehog living in your backpack. Write a story about your day together.”

Informational Writing– Write a mini‑report titled “All About Hedgehogs” using facts from the science lesson.

4. Math Connections; Option A: Hedgehog Quill Math

  • Younger kids: Count quills in groups of 10 (use pictures or drawings).
  • Older kids: Solve multiplication problems like: If a hedgehog has 6,000 quills and loses 200 during shedding, how many remain?

Option B: Hedgehog Graphing Graph:

  • Favorite hedgehog books
  • Hedgehog colors (brown, tan, gray)
  • Hedgehog foods

5. Art & Hands‑On Creativity: Craft Ideas

  • Paper Plate Hedgehog: paint or color the plate, add paper quills
  • Handprint Hedgehog: trace hand, cut out, add eyes and nose
  • Clay or Play‑Doh Hedgehog: use toothpicks or pasta for quills

STEM Twist: Build a “hedgehog habitat” using a shoebox, natural materials, and imagination.

6. Optional Snack Activity– A fun, kid‑friendly treat:

  • Hedgehog Apple Snack
    • Half an apple for the body
    • Insert pretzel sticks for quills
    • Add raisin eyes

Or: Hedgehog Cupcakes with chocolate sprinkles for quills.

7. History & Folklore: Explain that Hedgehog Day is connected to ancient European traditions where hedgehogs were believed to predict the weather — similar to Groundhog Day in the U.S.

Activity; Compare:

  • Hedgehog Day
  • Groundhog Day

Create a Venn diagram showing similarities and differences.

8. Wrap‑Up & Reflection Ask:

  • What was the most surprising thing you learned about hedgehogs
  • Would you want a hedgehog as a pet
  • What would you still like to learn

Learning can be fun, hands‑on, and full of curiosity! #HedgehogDay #HomeschoolFun #LearningThroughPlay

Groundhog Day Lesson Plan-; February 2 • #GroundhogDay Grades:

K–5 (easily adaptable) Theme: Weather, shadows, folklore, and seasonal change

1. Learning Objectives

  • Understand the tradition and folklore behind Groundhog Day.
  • Explore how shadows are formed and what affects them.
  • Practice prediction, observation, and simple data recording.
  • Engage creativity through crafts and storytelling.

2. Mini Lesson: What Is Groundhog Day?

Introduce the holiday: Explain that every February 2, people watch to see if a groundhog sees its shadow.

  • Shadow = 6 more weeks of winter
  • No shadow = early spring

Discuss that this is folklore, not real science — but it’s a fun way to talk about weather and seasons.

Optional read-aloud: Choose a children’s book about Groundhog Day, shadows, or hibernation

3. Science Activity: Exploring Shadows

Materials

  • Flashlight
  • Small stuffed animal or toy
  • White paper
  • Pencil

Activity Steps

  1. Place the toy on the paper.
  2. Shine the flashlight from different angles.
  3. Have your child trace the shadow each time.
  4. Compare: How does the shadow change when the light moves?

Discussion

  • What makes a shadow
  • Why the groundhog might see or not see its shadow
  • How sunlight changes throughout the day

4. Prediction Chart

Create a simple chart:

Student NamePredictionActual ResultNotes
Early Spring or More WinterWhat the groundhog predictedSunny? Cloudy?

Let kids make their own predictions before checking the real event.

5. Craft: Paper Plate Groundhog

Materials

  • Paper plate
  • Brown construction paper
  • Googly eyes
  • Glue
  • Scissors
  • Markers

Steps

  1. Cut out a groundhog shape from brown paper.
  2. Glue it to a popsicle stick.
  3. Cut a slit in the paper plate so the groundhog can “pop up.”
  4. Decorate the plate as grass or snow.

This makes a cute puppet for retelling the tradition.

6. Writing Prompt: Choose one:

  • If I were the groundhog, I would…
  • My prediction for spring is…
  • A silly story about a groundhog who refuses to come out…

Encourage creativity and humor.

7. Math Extension

  • Count how many days until spring.
  • Graph family predictions (bar graph).
  • Measure the length of shadows at different times of day.

8. Fun Ways to Celebrate

  • Watch a kid-friendly video about Groundhog Day.
  • Make “dirt cups” with pudding and crushed cookies.
  • Go outside for a shadow hunt.
  • Talk about animals that hibernat

Thank you,

Glenda, Charlie and David Cates