Forum Discussion
- JRscoobyExplorer II
Dtank wrote:
Old-Biscuit wrote:
No....not gonna do it!
Oh wait...we don't play that silly game in AZ
:)
Yes - AZ has got it right!
(For those that prefer Daylight Savings Time - one way or the other would be just fine! - NO spring forward, fall back!)
.
Change by half hour, and leave it alone - down_homeExplorer II4:30 today too dark to read, I though five more minutes i will need a flashlight.
The sun was over the mountains but not on the horizon though. December 22 it will be past dark at 4:00 central here.
More I think about it, establishing time in our country with High noon at 12:00 makes the most sense. Or at least makes as more sense than shifting time an hour in March and November.No worries about Train travelers. Truck Drivers don't reference the clock either it seems. About 3:00 pm many's day begins as the trucks are filled as the warehouse or factory day ends.
Why not: Today's electronics and nuclear clock or gps satellites adjust the clocks by signals.
My Native American Ancestors got up when the sun came up, or animals started moving if they were hunting. As the deer here do, that are not hunted it is generally sunup.
Why wreck our bodies and minds living by a Wall street mechanical clock not nature's clock.
If they set high noon as 12:00clock time in Nashville or close,as the state is about 450 miles extreme upper east Tn to southwest t the Arkansas border, that would be roughly 225 miles to the border in each direction. As time changes about 1 minute every 13 miles. High noon would only be off actual sun time about 17 minutes.
i think Tennesseans would agree to that. - DtankExplorer
Old-Biscuit wrote:
No....not gonna do it!
Oh wait...we don't play that silly game in AZ
:)
Yes - AZ has got it right!
(For those that prefer Daylight Savings Time - one way or the other would be just fine! - NO spring forward, fall back!)
. - MFLNomad II^^^^^That is a great idea, thanks!!
Jerry - d3500ramExplorer III
- azdryheatExplorerNot mentioned is Hawaii, the other state that doesn't change time.
- dodge_guyExplorer IIWhat! today too?
- dedmistonModerator
ppine wrote:
I used to work on the Navajo Res in Arizona. The Navajo Nation recognizes Daylight Savings Time but the rest of the state doesn't. It was very confusing making calls to other time zones.
Booking a jeep tour at Canyon de Chelly was always an adventure. - ppineExplorer III used to work on the Navajo Res in Arizona. The Navajo Nation recognizes Daylight Savings Time but the rest of the state doesn't. It was very confusing making calls to other time zones.
- CavemanCharlieExplorer IIIWhy would I reset them now ?? They are just starting to read the correct time. Next spring they will all be off by a hour again. :p
Actually, I'm lying... They read the correct time all summer and they are a hour off all winter.
On the farm, these days, we don't have a lot to do in the winter so I don't care what time it is. It used to be a lot different in the old days but, we are getting old so in the winter I stay home a lot and hibernate like a bear. Some snow storms I don't even bother to clean out the driveway. Would be nice if I could go south but, we still have some livestock to take care of and it is to expensive to go. Not sure where I would go anyway. If I believe everything I see on the internet the south is all crime, alligators, hurricanes, and red necks.
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