โMar-12-2021 08:26 AM
โMar-14-2021 10:39 AM
โMar-14-2021 08:47 AM
SpeakEasy wrote:mowermech wrote:PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:wanderingaimlessly wrote:
But, but, if you stay heading west all the time, you will never get old and die since the clocks stay moving back. ๐
No - you lose more if you go far enough west, springing forward 23 hours.
The US Navy once took away my daughter's birthday.
On Dec 4, 1982, we left Seattle on a Northwest flight that was running late, leaving about 9 pm. We arrived in Tokyo at 1:15 AM on Dec 6.
After a 3 hour ride to Yokosuka, we got up at about 9 local time to look around the base. My daughter, whose birthday was Dec 5, was upset that she did not get a birthday on her birthday.
Of course, now she say's she is a year younger than her DL says saying "The US Navy took away my birthday in 1982, so I'm a year younger than you think."
In 1966 I had two birthdays! Left Saigon on my birthday, landed in Oakland on my birthday.
So how old do you say you are???
-S
โMar-13-2021 06:25 PM
โMar-13-2021 04:25 PM
โMar-13-2021 02:35 PM
โMar-13-2021 12:38 PM
โMar-13-2021 08:59 AM
mowermech wrote:PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:wanderingaimlessly wrote:
But, but, if you stay heading west all the time, you will never get old and die since the clocks stay moving back. ๐
No - you lose more if you go far enough west, springing forward 23 hours.
The US Navy once took away my daughter's birthday.
On Dec 4, 1982, we left Seattle on a Northwest flight that was running late, leaving about 9 pm. We arrived in Tokyo at 1:15 AM on Dec 6.
After a 3 hour ride to Yokosuka, we got up at about 9 local time to look around the base. My daughter, whose birthday was Dec 5, was upset that she did not get a birthday on her birthday.
Of course, now she say's she is a year younger than her DL says saying "The US Navy took away my birthday in 1982, so I'm a year younger than you think."
In 1966 I had two birthdays! Left Saigon on my birthday, landed in Oakland on my birthday.
โMar-13-2021 08:21 AM
egh33 wrote:
I hate that waking up at 2 am to change the clock.
โMar-13-2021 05:51 AM
PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:wanderingaimlessly wrote:
But, but, if you stay heading west all the time, you will never get old and die since the clocks stay moving back. ๐
No - you lose more if you go far enough west, springing forward 23 hours.
The US Navy once took away my daughter's birthday.
On Dec 4, 1982, we left Seattle on a Northwest flight that was running late, leaving about 9 pm. We arrived in Tokyo at 1:15 AM on Dec 6.
After a 3 hour ride to Yokosuka, we got up at about 9 local time to look around the base. My daughter, whose birthday was Dec 5, was upset that she did not get a birthday on her birthday.
Of course, now she say's she is a year younger than her DL says saying "The US Navy took away my birthday in 1982, so I'm a year younger than you think."
โMar-13-2021 04:02 AM
PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:
What's the big deal on changing clocks?
For an RVer.
I've changed 2 times in one day several times in long tows.
One day three times. Left El Paso on US-180 headed east, changed from Mtn to Central TZ at Culberson County line near Guadalupe Peak, changed from Central TZ to Mtn TZ at NM border south of Carlsbad, changed from Mountain to Central TZ again at TX border just past Hobbs.
Headed west is better because you gain an hour at each crossing.
I won't even mention the potential fun in Arizona where much of the state does not do DST, and the Navaho Nation does DST.
โMar-13-2021 03:34 AM
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โMar-12-2021 04:09 PM
โMar-12-2021 04:05 PM