DST ends, hallelujah.

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john250

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DST is the devil incarnate. It is supported by communists, terrorists, fascists, greedy wall St. bankers, do-nothing Congressmen, corrupt presidents, and the ACLU. Bet you didn't know that Osama bin Laden loves DST because he has more time to play golf after a hard day killing Americans.
Tomorrow, we return to the natural, holistic, soothing practice of standard time.
 
You could argue over the pros and cons til you're blue in the face. Finally it just comes down to the fact that we all should have a lot more to be worried about than it being a little darker earlier in the evening. For most of you if that is your biggest problem of the year I would trade places with you in a heartbeat.
 
my mother in law feels the exact same way...get back to God's tiime. She keeps one clock always at standard time and practically counts the days till it returns.
Me... it does not bother me. In a couple of weeks I will be going to work in the dark and coming home in the dark...school bus! And the farm in between
 
Ours changed last weekend, we have had a week already of the dark nights, I don't mind that it's what comes with it I hate. Long cold WINTER I hate this time of year. Give me Sunshine anytime, think I was born in the wrong part of the World. :frowns:
 
Fred Belknap":33rk2qyb said:
What I hate is figgering out how to change my wrist watch and the clocks in the vehicles. :frowns:
Was at my folks friday and dad had me set the time on the TV I have to do it twice a yr :lol:

I have one tractor that the time will be right on now my wife hates it because I don't move the time on my tractor I telll her that is so she won't think it is as late and she will work longer
 
CKC1586":3lf978d9 said:
Red Bull Breeder":3lf978d9 said:
Don't worry about what the clock says, just start at daylight and quit when you get done!!!
:lol: :clap: Funny how that works, aint it!
That makes and assumption you can get it all done. :(
 
i have a DST question.
We set the time back in the fall. But what do they do in Austrailia? I mean there it is spring, they are suppose to spring forward! I was just falling asleep the other night, and this popped into my head. Talk about a brain teaser before bed.
 
Why Daylight Savings

At 2:00 a.m. local on Sunday, most of the United States (except Hawaii and Arizona) will leave daylight saving time behind and fall back an hour to standard time.

The annoyance of resetting clocks (or forgetting to, and showing up an hour early for appointments on Sunday) may raise the question of why we bother with this rigmarole in the first place.

Daylight saving time is most often associated with the oh-so-sweet extra hour of sleep in fall (and the not-so-nice loss of an hour in spring), but some of the original reasons for resetting our clocks twice a year including saving energy and having more daylight hours for retailers, sporting events and other activities that benefit from a longer day.

As far back as the 1700s, people recognized the potential to save energy by jumping clocks ahead one hour in the summer - Benjamin Franklin even wrote about it - although the idea was not put into practice until the 20th century.

During both World Wars, the United States and Great Britain began observing daylight saving time.

After the war, U.S. states were free to choose whether to observe daylight saving time and the calendar start dates of the time change. The result was time confusion for travelers and newscasters. In 1966, Congress enacted the Uniform Time Act, which stated that if any state observed daylight saving, it had to follow a uniform protocol, beginning and ending on the same dates throughout the country.

Starting in 2007, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 lengthened daylight saving time by four weeks, starting it three weeks earlier in spring and ending it one week later in fall. Daylight saving now begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday of November.

Formerly it began on the first Sunday of April and ended on the last Sunday of October, so that extra week gives trick-or-treaters a precious extra hour of candy-gathering before sunset.

But not everyone is wild about daylight saving time, with some states opting out all together and others proposing to do so.

Hawaii has never observed daylight saving time, as its tropical latitude means its daylight hours stay fairly constant year-round. Arizona likewise has not observed daylight saving time since 1967 because the extra daylight in the summer would just mean more energy consumption to keep the desert state's residents cool.

Many Alaskans would like to stop observing daylight saving time because the change in daylight from summer to winter is already so extreme at their northerly latitude. A petition has even been set before the state this year to abolish the observance of daylight saving time in Alaska.

Florida too finds daylight saving time less useful because of it's southerly latitude. In 2008, a Florida state senator introduced a bill to abolish the practice in Florida.

From 1970 to 2006, most of Indiana didn't observe daylights time, but began to do so in April 2006 after eight counties in the western portion of the state switched from the Eastern to the Central Time Zone.

None of the U.S. territories, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, observe daylight saving time.
 
It has always seemed to me that if we're going to be changing times at all, DST and standard should be switched. Spring back and fall forward just seems to make more sense.

I'm sure there are good reasons behind it all, just waaay over my head.
 
Jim62":1kzy7vb6 said:
It has always seemed to me that if we're going to be changing times at all, DST and standard should be switched. Spring back and fall forward just seems to make more sense.

I'm sure there are good reasons behind it all, just waaay over my head.

Actually, Jim, there a zero good reasons for DST unless you own a golf course. The energy saving part is pretty well debunked.
For a hay producer in Indiana it means the dew doesn't go off until noon. Apparently the hay producer lobby is pretty weak. :nod:
Oh well, it really isn't that important but I never miss a chance to mock DST.
 
I for one love it. Summer is short enough as it is; I like to get have as much daylight as possible when I get home from work. Gives me more time to get work done on the farm and is nice for ball games and other leisure activities at night. I look forward to dst every spring and dread its end.
 
If I could stay and work on the farm full time, it wouldn't matter. Start at daylight and work until dark. Same amount of hours no matter how you set the clock.

But, the problem that I and many others face is that it's now dark at 6:00. That means either checking/feeding up with lights or leaving the regular job early. Fortunately, I work for myself, so I just set my hours to start and end earlier in town in order to get to the farm before dark.

I would change to DST year around if possible. :nod:
 
I am still waking up at four thinking it is five. Then I am fragged when I get home. For me, it means hustling out to feed right after school because it is dark by six. My son was asking me about the extra hour of sleep. I told him that you get the extra hour because you are ready to go to bed by eight instead of nine. Chickens quit laying. I had my son at school by seven yesterday because I felt the urgency to leave, since it was broad daylight outside. He has tennis practice at 7:20, so he had a little extra time for warm-ups. I like the longer days, but they would shorten by themselves anyway. By the time Christmas rolls around it will be dark all the time anyway. At least I get home early enough to do chores when the day does get short. When I had an 8 to 5 job, it was dark on the way to work and dark when I got home by the time I finished my commute. That's depressing. I like the longer days.

I was in bed by eight and dead asleep, I am sure, by eight-thirty.
 
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