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Honored Contributor
Posts: 18,415
Registered: ‎11-25-2011

Re: Time change!

[ Edited ]

@Junebug54wrote:

@cherry Wow where do you live Cherry that it doesn't get light until almost noon?


@Junebug54

 

On December 21, Winter Solstice, the sun rises in

Michigan - 9:14am

 

Even far, far north in Fairbanks, Alaska, on Dec 21,

the sun rises at 10:50am.

 

Noon? Don’t see it....unless ‘almost’ means some time after 6am.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,739
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

My state is one of the cloudiest in the nation. We get  far less sunlight than the other states because of this

 

That is why we don't get full light until so late in the morning  in the dark of winter under DST...We will never do that again in my state. People were furious

Honored Contributor
Posts: 43,314
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

It was getting lighter already (SE Michigan) before we flipped the DST switch.  I think natural time keeping (if I can even call it that) should be left alone.  Let things progress the way they did for centuries before some man got the idea of messing with the time for a part of the year.  Ancestors didn't die and neither will we.

 

As far as DST goes, I never have a problem with it because I approach it this way.  I don't change the clocks until Sunday morning after I wake up.  This way, I feel like I got all of the hours of sleep that I normally get and I'm voluntarily giving up an hour of the morning.  

 

 

There are times when you must speak, not because you are going to change the opposing side, but because if you do not speak, they have changed you.
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Honored Contributor
Posts: 23,835
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

It has never affected me one way or the other.  It is just an hour. Resetting the clocks is a pain....but no big deal really.  I just went about my normal Sunday....set the clocks late in the afternoon. I pretty much do not watch the clock on a Sunday. 

Frequent Contributor
Posts: 108
Registered: ‎08-04-2013

We moved from California to Arizona in October.  I'm not going to miss DST.  I agree that we should do away with it across the U.S.

It's the little things.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 11,422
Registered: ‎03-12-2010

I've never seen the point of having more daylight at the end of the day.  Morning daylight would seem to me to be more useful and conducive to good health.  Wake up naturally, do what's needed or what you want in the morning, etc.   By the time you get to the end of the day, you're already awake and moving around and have done most of what you're going to do.  

But then again, I don't play sports in the evenings or anything like that.

 

 

[was Homegirl] Love to be home . . . thus the screen name. Joined 2003.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,319
Registered: ‎03-11-2010

Doesn’t bother me 

I do like the longer days and being able to play golf longer now that I do, in the height of summer is a plus

Honored Contributor
Posts: 21,867
Registered: ‎10-25-2010

I like the change to DST and back again.  Keep it the way it is. It’s only an hour and a i like the extra hour of light in the evening during the warmer months.

 

In 1973/1974  we stayed on DST all winter long to save on fuel. I don’t know if it did save anything, but it happened anyway.My daughter was born in January, 1974 and her birth certificate says DST beside the time of her birth.

Valued Contributor
Posts: 944
Registered: ‎03-09-2010
I hate DST more than just about anything except summer itself. The time change affects my body clock and I don’t feel right for a long time. Over the years, Congress has snuck in additional time on DST, making it worse. Let Florida do what it wants. In summer it gets light here before 4 AM! Give me Standard time year round.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,739
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

I don't know if this is still the case ,but  at one time,  I know Indiana, did not go on DST. They are a big farming state ,and this might be the reason. I'm not sure if this still  the way the state chooses it's time