kaz7
Well-Known Member
I never get the extra hours sleep as merlin doesnt know we have the extra hour in bed and pesters me for breakfast at the old time , takes him a few days to sort it out
Going to work when it's dark, Going home when it's dark.
Can't wait.
I hate these next 3 months. If you're lucky, and you get a clear frosty day in mid January, you may notice a bit of a stretch in the evening. But up to Christmas is a gloomy time of the year.Going to work when it's dark, Going home when it's dark.
Can't wait.
Edited for accuracy Kaz !!Cocks back this weekend
Also including Xmas.I hate these next 3 months. If you're lucky, and you get a clear frosty day in mid January, you may notice a bit of a stretch in the evening. But up to Christmas is a gloomy time of the year.
Don’t you find the period afterwards Jan/early Feb worse?I hate these next 3 months. If you're lucky, and you get a clear frosty day in mid January, you may notice a bit of a stretch in the evening. But up to Christmas is a gloomy time of the year.
Surprisingly, no. Maybe it's a psychological thing. Get to mid January, and you're nearly a month past the shortest day. You just feel (well, I do!) that you're on the right track.Don’t you find the period afterwards Jan/early Feb worse?
Nope. Blame Starmer.Boy am I glad you pointed this out. Didn't it happen last year too?
Well look how many of the matchgoers seem to miss the second halves after leaving early :-)Oh great. The time of year when I miss the first half of a few matches.
Haha. True.Well look how many of the matchgoers seem to miss the second halves after leaving early :-)
Mad as it sounds there were clocks for it - corn exchange in Bristol has a GMT and local time clock still https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/corn-exchange-dualtime-clockDid you know that, across Britain, we used to have our own time in each town in the country, based on the Solar Noon?
The time was never the same from one place to the next, but the time was accurate everywhere because the only barometer for what time it is, is the point at which the Sun hits the Local Meridian means it’s Noon (but there only, at that point).
It was the introduction of the railways that saw a standard time for the whole country introduced. Because people could travel from one place to another more quickly than ever before, they were finding that they were missing trains, Royal Mail were finding that they were missing deliveries, and people were arriving at places at the wrong time because where a train might set off from one location at 3pm and be expected to arrive in another location 30 minutes later, it was only 30 minutes later than the time where the train set off, but the train didn’t arrive at the other location 30 minutes later in their local time… so a standard time was introduced for everywhere.
Agree Jan and Feb are just depressingDon’t you find the period afterwards Jan/early Feb worse?
Probably the cost of changing, or at least needing to review, all the software and technology that’s been programmed to automatically adjust displayed time is one reason. Between 1968 and 71 the UK stayed on BST but decided to return to DST because they couldn’t tell if it was beneficial or not.Why do we still do this? Is there any benefit?