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Coffee Shop
Daylight Savings Time
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<blockquote data-quote="john250" data-source="post: 510558" data-attributes="member: 4406"><p>Sugarman,</p><p>I am on the western edge of the eastern time zone, and that is a big influence on my opinion. </p><p>Indiana ignored DST for most of my life, until an idiot governor and our captains of industry decided it had to be changed. Life was good on slow time. Life is crazy on fast time. </p><p>Noon (midday, the high point of the sun) comes about 3 pm. People rise in the dark in the summer, which just ain't right. The daylight lasts until 10:30 pm at its worst. </p><p>As a farmer, I can ignore all this and just work the way I always have. But when I have to interact with the rest of the world for meetings and banking hours and such, it is a real pain in the butt. </p><p>I make hay, and on DST there isn't much need to get out of bed until 10 am or so. Then, I am up until midnight baling. </p><p>Mostly, I'm just grumpy about having it crammed down my throat. The only folks who benefit around here are golf courses. </p><p>DST does not save energy. It sends kids to the bus stop in the dark. It screws up my schedules. It drives me nuts (ok, so it isn't a long drive). </p><p>My best solution so far is to ignore the clocks, and work when I am awake and sleep when I am sleepy. </p><p>DST is just a huge disruption for no benefit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="john250, post: 510558, member: 4406"] Sugarman, I am on the western edge of the eastern time zone, and that is a big influence on my opinion. Indiana ignored DST for most of my life, until an idiot governor and our captains of industry decided it had to be changed. Life was good on slow time. Life is crazy on fast time. Noon (midday, the high point of the sun) comes about 3 pm. People rise in the dark in the summer, which just ain't right. The daylight lasts until 10:30 pm at its worst. As a farmer, I can ignore all this and just work the way I always have. But when I have to interact with the rest of the world for meetings and banking hours and such, it is a real pain in the butt. I make hay, and on DST there isn't much need to get out of bed until 10 am or so. Then, I am up until midnight baling. Mostly, I'm just grumpy about having it crammed down my throat. The only folks who benefit around here are golf courses. DST does not save energy. It sends kids to the bus stop in the dark. It screws up my schedules. It drives me nuts (ok, so it isn't a long drive). My best solution so far is to ignore the clocks, and work when I am awake and sleep when I am sleepy. DST is just a huge disruption for no benefit. [/QUOTE]
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