Originally posted by Old Grumpy
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Clocks again
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They tried staying an hour ahead in the winter in, I think,the early '70s. It was called 'British Standard Time' and it raised a lot of complaints (children having to go to school in the dark, for instace, though they have to do that in the North and Scotland anyway). Other countries have odd times too. In 'The Cherry Orchard', I thik, it's light at 2 am.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThey tried staying an hour ahead in the winter in, I think,the early '70s. It was called 'British Standard Time' and it raised a lot of complaints (children having to go to school in the dark, for instace, though they have to do that in the North and Scotland anyway). Other countries have odd times too. In 'The Cherry Orchard', I thik, it's light at 2 am.
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Other countries have odd times too. In 'The Cherry Orchard', I think, it's light at 2 am.
I lived above latitude 60 degrees for a while, and around April it was certainly possible to be woken up with bright sunlight at 2am - much to my surprise. Blackout is needed to stop that, and my attempts with a carboard box were insufficient.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThey tried staying an hour ahead in the winter in, I think,the early '70s. It was called 'British Standard Time' and it raised a lot of complaints (children having to go to school in the dark, for instace, though they have to do that in the North and Scotland anyway). Other countries have odd times too. In 'The Cherry Orchard', I thik, it's light at 2 am.
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It's probably less complicated now than it was in pre-Victorian times. The time was calculated around the country by the position of the sun; and the position of the sun varied from place to place. "Railway time" was introduced by GWR in 1840 and was standardised by about 1860. Changing the hour twice a year seems easier than changing it several times a day as one travelled across the country.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostFall back?
But I have a technological wheeze which removes all possible doubt: for whatever time you set your car time/date, simply leave it there. Half the year you will be wrong by exactly an hour, the other half spot on. Simple. Forget spring forward.
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Originally posted by Padraig View PostBut I have a technological wheeze which removes all possible doubt: for whatever time you set your car time/date, simply leave it there. Half the year you will be wrong by exactly an hour, the other half spot on. Simple. Forget spring forward.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Or ignore the beginnings and ends of days and do everything in the middle. Just put up with being an hour early or late for some things. Actually, I've already changed the oven clock and will change my bedroom clock in a minute. As I feel 'wore out' already I'll go to bed tonight according to GMT, 'bout 9pm BST. Or is it the other way round???
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View Post
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Thanks,old grumpy: I didn't know there was a sleep society, but I agree entirely with their argument for a permanaent change to GMT. It's the natural time; lighter mornings are more healthy than lighter evenings.
I've had a few poor-sleep nights recently (I count being awake more than two hours in the middle of the night as a poor sleep night, where I get four or four-and-a-half hours only) and I hear that acquaintances of ours have worse problems with sleeplessness. It seems to be more common now than in earlier times and I'm sure that neighbourhood noise nusiance is a major factor, though looking at brightly-lit LED screens late at night may also contribute.
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