Showing posts with label Daylight Savings Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daylight Savings Time. Show all posts

August 10 - Happy Birthday, Mr. Summer Time

   Posted on August 10, 2022     


This is an update of my post published on August 10, 2011:



Re-setting the Clocks
Daylight Savings Time is an idea more than one person has had, over the years. Benjamin Franklin urged people, not to turn back their clocks, but to just get up earlier in the summer. He even satirically suggested that a cannon be blasted off at sunrise in Paris to wake people up in time to enjoy the daylight. In 1895 an entomologist from New Zealand suggested a two-hour daylight-saving shift, and in 1905 today's birthday boy, British builder William Willet, suggested four 20-minute shifts in April, and back in September, to take advantage of longer days and shorter nights.

The actual solution that most of the world ended up adopting, starting in Germany, Britain, and other European nations during World War I, is setting clocks forward one hour in the spring and resetting them back again in the fall. This is called Daylight Savings Time or Summer Time.

Once he proposed his idea for Summer Time, William Willett worked tirelessly to get a law mandating the practice passed. Actually, Willett died the year before it was adopted.


DST is still practiced in the United States (except for Arizona! - except DST is practiced in Arizona's reservations!), most of Canada and Mexico, and most of Europe. It is also practiced in many Mideast countries, part of Australia, New Zealand, and a few nations in African and South America. However, although most of South America, Central America, and Asia, plus quite a bit of Africa, once observed DST, it is no longer practiced in most of those areas. Daylight Savings Time was never used in central Africa, Saudi Arabia, and Southeast Asia.


Daylight saving time regions:
  Formerly used daylight saving
  Never used daylight saving





 
Let's face it, tropical locales need DST less than do countries with higher latitudes. The higher the latitude, the more dramatically day length changes with the seasons. You might already know that the sun NEVER sets in polar regions during their summers. For example, in parts of Finland the sun does not set for 73 days, and in Svalbard, Norway, there is no sunset from April 19 to August 23 – 126 days! If anyone were to spend a year right smack at the North Pole, she or he would see that the sun is up for fully half the year and then down for the other half!


The "midnight sun" over Norway


BUT...


It turns out that our bodies do not do well with sudden one-hour shifts that Daylight Savings Time usually entails. Now a lot of people in the United States are trying to get rid of the twice-a-year change. The European Union is also contemplating getting rid of the practice, and some nations recently have.






Missouri's Admission Day








Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:





March 11, 2012 - Daylight Savings and Plumbing



Daylight Savings Time Begins

Find out more about where and why we “spring forward” by moving our clocks ahead one hour on this day, here and also here.

Also...
World Plumbing Day

Plumbing is really important to the health and safety of modern society—and some people in the world do not have the plumbing to insure safe drinking water and adequate waste disposal. Check out the official website for info.

Here are some interesting pages about the history of plumbing. 

Here is a cool Flash game called Pipes. It's sort of plumbing-meets-logic-puzzle.



Boy, I wish people still made these cool candy plumbing fixtures! Wouldn't they be fun to collect and combine? 



Also on this date:




August 10, 2011 - Happy Birthday, William Willett


Re-setting the Clocks
I like to think of William Willett as Mr. Summer Time...

Daylight Savings Time is an idea more than one person has had, over the years. Benjamin Franklin urged people, not to turn back their clocks, but to just get up earlier in the summer. He even satirically suggested that a cannon be blasted off at sunrise in Paris to wake people up in time to enjoy the daylight. In 1895 an entomologist from New Zealand suggested a two-hour daylight-saving shift, and in 1905 today's birthday boy, British builder William Willet, suggested four 20-minute shifts in April, and back in September, to take advantage of longer days and shorter nights.

The actual solution that most of the world ended up adopting, starting in Germany, Britain, and other European nations during World War I, is setting clocks forward one hour in the spring and resetting them back again in the fall. This is called Daylight Savings Time or Summer Time.

Once he proposed his idea for Summer Time, William Willett worked tirelessly to get a law mandating the practice passed. Unfortunately, Willett died the year before it was adopted.

DST is still practiced in the United States (except for Arizona!), most of Canada and Mexico, and most of Europe. It is also practiced in many Mid-East countries, part of Australia, New Zealand, and a few nations in African and South America. However, although most of South America, Central America, and Asia, plus quite a bit of Africa, once observed DST, it is no longer practiced in most of those areas. Daylight Savings Time was never used in central Africa, Saudi Arabia, and Southeast Asia.
Nordkapp, Norway
- the famous "midnight sun"

Let's face it, tropical locales need DST less than do countries with higher latitudes. The higher the latitude, the more dramatically day length changes with the seasons. You might already know that the sun NEVER sets in polar regions during their summers. For example, in parts of Finland the sun does not set for 73 days, and in Svalbard, Norway, there is no sunset from April 19 to August 23 – 126 days! If anyone were to spend a year right smack at the North Pole, she or he would see that the sun is up for fully half the year and then down for the other half!

November 1, 2009

Ask your kids what they think the most common noun in the English language is. (Remind them that words like “I” and “the” and “you” and “and” AREN'T nouns!)

After fielding ten or more guesses, reveal this list:

TEN MOST COMMON NOUNS in the English Language:

1. Time
2. Person/People
3. Year
4. Way
5. Day
6. Thing
7. Man
8. World
9. Life
10. Hand

(Source: Oxford University Press, 2006
http://www.antimoon.com/forum/t3794.htm)

Wow! Notice that, not only is the #1 word “time,” but THREE nouns out of the top ten are time words (“time,” “year,” and “day”)! We seem to talk and write about time a lot! As we make arrangements with people about work and school and play, driving and picking up (and of course watching TV!), we have to talk about the time. So, yeah, time is pretty important!

Today, Daylight Savings Time ends in the US and Canada.

So, what gives with this Daylight Savings Time “spring forward” and “fall back” stuff? Why do we complicate our lives with resetting our clocks twice a year? Does everyone in the world do it? Who thought of it?

The idea is that, as our days get longer and longer, as we approach the summer solstice, we adjust our clocks to move more of these daylight hours into the afternoon and evening, away from the early morning. This helps most of us who live in cities and whose schedules for work and school don't follow the sun. We don't want the sun shining into our bedroom windows at 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning, and we often have afternoon and evening activities that benefit from more daylight then. It's been argued that DST saves lives because it reduces traffic accidents, and that it saves energy—but recent research doesn't necessarily back up these claims. The problems with DST include disruption of farming jobs, which are of course tied to the sun;the inevitable mistakes the first day or two as DST begins or ends, as some people forget to reset their clocks; and complications for travelers crossing state or country lines and time zones.

The modern Daylight Savings Time was first suggested in 1895 by a New Zealand entomologist (a scientist who studies insects) named George Vernon Hudson.

Daylight Savings Time is called “summer time” in Europe and Mexico, and the start and end dates are not the same as those used in the U.S. and Canada. Not every state in the United States uses DST—for example, people in Hawaii and most of Arizona don't use it. Not every country in the world uses it, either. Most countries at high latitudes use it, and most equatorial countries don't. Check out the map:

Source: Wikipedia


Kids learning to tell the time might like this website:
http://classroom.jc-schools.net/basic/math-time.html 
One of the best time zone maps can be found here:
http://www.tiglion.com/travel/region/timezone.htm
Here is a smaller map:
http://www.onepointed.com/dan/images/time_zone_map.jpg