This Sunday many will be were some go ahead one hour and some go back an hour pending where you live in accord to the zero meridian.
Daylight time was first endorsed in Germany in 1915, soon thereafter it was adapted by Britain most of Europe and Canada. Since the sun shone for a time while most people were asleep, it was reasoned that light far better utilizing time by way of amending our time within the day. The solution was to push the clocks ahead one hour in springtime, causing people to wake an hour earlier. Expending less energy in light their homes, the thought was if time was adjusted patterns would adjust with it. And all would change their daily routines. When the days started getting shorter in the fall and people awoke to increasing darkness, the clocks were turned back an hour to get more light in the morning. Although first instituted in 1915, the idea of daylight time had been batted around for a more than a century. Benjamin Franklin suggested the idea more than once in the 1770s while he was an emissary to France. It wasn't until more than a century later that the idea of daylight time was taken seriously. William Willett, an English builder, revived the idea in 1907, and eight years later Germany was the first nation to adopt daylight time. Reason being it was to conserve energy. Britain quickly followed suit and instituted British Summer Time in 1916. Several areas, including parts of Europe, Canada and the United States, followed suit after the First World War. In most cases, daylight time ended with the armistice. During the Second World War, a different type of daylight time was reestablished by Britain and clocks were set two hours ahead of Greenwich time during the summer. It was known as “Double Summer Time”. The time shift didn't end with the summer, as clocks were rolled back to be one hour ahead of GMT through the winter. The Uniform Time Act, enacted by the U.S. Congress in 1966, established a system of uniform for each region, as do other countries around the world. Yet there are some places that still don't observe daylight savings time around the world but the majority of the world have.
Not to crazy about the time change now my body has to get adjusted all over again....But i am looking forward to the sun staying out a little longer....
ReplyDeleteJules, ironically here in this province there has been much debate over this issue but much like Hawaii and Arizona here we don't have nor observe time change. I don't know why this province has never made the change but so far it seems to be something that the province has never wished to change. In comparison to other places, I must say that I am glad but come Sunday most do.
ReplyDeleteooooh didn't realize it was that time again. thanks!
ReplyDeletethe only difference is, it will be darker when I wake up
ReplyDeleteNeither did I till I heard it on the television.
ReplyDeleteYeppers, where as here it's going to shine right on time :) But there is something to be said for daylights saving time. Some have there first coffee, some have there first tea...:)
ReplyDeleteAnd some like me have their pillow printed on the cheek lol! The idea of coming back home and having an extra hour of sunlight on the balcony is good. I think we are timed according to the moment we were born, don`t you think. Like if you were born early, you tend to wake up early and vice-versa. Would be curious to know if it is true for others? Interesting the story of daylight saving time. I suppose countries where days are longer do not tend to observe this. It seems logical to use the sunlight and save energy as much as possible. Hope it will be easier to wake up, it would be a good moment to try going back to starting work at 7:00 to finish earlier, will see.
ReplyDeleteVery nice picture by the way.
I never thought of it that way Danielle yet I love the mornings I really do, it's that time where when you can see a sun rise, it's really something yet that is just me. I love sunsets but this is a different way of looking at it. This was not my own picture I just grabbed it out from the internet.
ReplyDeleteI would oppose it...if anyone even asked me! I can't really see a significant benefit, & why wouldn't we adjust to "natural" time? Seems to me that it would be easier than changing our "inner" clock twice a year. Physiologically, & psychologically, many people are stressed by it. They "adjust" only to change again!
ReplyDeleteMy life is totally unstructured, so I'm not speaking about me, necessarily...except for rare appointments.What is it about a broken clock being right at least twice a day? (I always wander off...)
Hmmm. How many hours in the longest day, how many in the shortest, depending on where we live? That's worth looking up. I think that we could see both sunrise & sunset. I love them both.
Danielle asked an interesting question. I'd love to know if anyone has any thoughts about it. I was born at 3:45a, & for some months, I've been going to bed at 4a. I sleep about five hours. Prior to this, I loved waking at dawn.
(Just ignore me, I'm not "normal"!)
This is one of the stupider things we humans do. Studies have shown that not only is no energy saved, it changes the time of high traffic so that the pollution is more harmful. Not to mention schedules for animals, children and the sick.
ReplyDeleteIf I want to get get up at dawn, I am capable of doing that without the government saying just pretend it's 7 o'clock.
Lucija, I just woke up an hour ago and I usually sleep in till 5am. Here we don't have that time change. Danielle did ask a thought provoking question. I actually am watching the weather right now as I hope to capture a morning sunrise. There are several people Lucija that are friends but just a couple will not write, however I love to follow the sun.
ReplyDeleteI love to run, and all going well, I will be running within a month. I was born at 2am on June 1st. I will never ignore you as your very decent in the way you speak and what is normal? If we all were exactly the same this would be a rather boring world wouldn't it?
DJ, I truly believe this. Yesterday I was reading on the history of the creation of time zones in the late afternoon after I arrived home. Time is not an agenda set by way of governments, yet we do have this time change. Yet I don't think that there is one penny now saved by day light savings time. The reason is that we went from a society that had an agenda of a 9 to 5, to one now that is all different shifts. So I don't think we really save much with this time change. We humans are different didnt you know? :)
ReplyDeleteI truly understand what you mean and it's so true.
its snowing here again and again... yes there is a natural time and an artificial time (like the foto !!!)
ReplyDeleteThanks much Brigyde this is a write with regards to the time zones peace to you there in Bovaria.
ReplyDeleteI was born 2pm and my natural tendancy is to stay up late and wake late.
ReplyDeleteNot kidding.......this is interesting GG. Do you think that the time that we come out of the womb effects our circadian rhythms? Very neat thought I must say.
ReplyDeleteHo funny, I am glad some of you have given thoughts to the question. I must say I do wake up very slowly and my mid-days are far better as far as energy than too early, and I was born around 11:30 in the morning. Really, I agree that with all the different shifts that people work and in reality the world does not stop turning when the sun goes down, so the energy saved if any must be minimal. Interesting points about pollution being more harmful in later hours of morning. So Jack, for you, being born on such early morning hours would explain your tendency to be an early bird. Interesting all in all. A good night to you.
ReplyDeleteHi!
ReplyDeleteI was born a little past 6am on Feb 22. Must be the reason why i prefer the early morning sun. What about my love for the Moon ... the pisces in me, i supposed :)
ReplyDeleteWell this will apply effectively tomorrow! I love the early morning sun, I never thought this might play some role within time but hey Sunday the clocks turn back or forwards but right now I am not even thinking about time.
ReplyDelete.well..I was born at 9pm ..[yes I.m an Owl:)]
ReplyDeleteWell Owl or otherwise tonights the night!
ReplyDelete