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Do You Like Daylight Savings Time?

Do You Like Daylight Savings?

  • Yes

    Votes: 18 40.0%
  • No

    Votes: 22 48.9%
  • Don't care

    Votes: 5 11.1%

  • Total voters
    45

Marcia

Active Member
Gwen said:
I think it's silly. We have exactly the same number of hours of daylight either way--except for the one day that we change in the spring and fall. I don't really see the point.

I agree On top of that, they keep changing the time we switch over.

I think we all would do better sticking with standard time. I wasn't hungry tonight at the usual time because it was really an hour earlier, so 6:15 p.m. was really 5:15 and I wasn't hungry. I made dinner anyway because that's a good time for me to do it but I did not like it.
 

Matt Black

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Matt Black said:
In which case DST all year round is likely to make you do that more

Allow me to expand on that:

To get as close as possible to 'getting up with the sun and going to bed with it' one should rise and retire an equidistant amount of time from 12 noon Standard Time ie: get up at 4am and go to bed 8pm for 8 hours' sleep, which would generally mean the working day having to be from 7am to 3pm instead of 9 to 5 (assuming we wanted everything else i our daily routine to remain the same). But modern life, with its 9 to 5 regime, generally does not permit that: most of us rise between 6am and 7am and then go to bed sometime between 10pm and 11pm. The advantage of DST is that it moves our day an hour closer to the 4am to 8pm 'ideal day', and on that argument alone we should have it all year round.
 

EdSutton

New Member
Personally, I would like to see DST 'extended' one more week in November, thus Election Day would occur on DST. Beyond that, I personally don't care a great deal one way or the other, as a farmer. Regardless of what the clock may say, I can't bale any hay until it dries off sufficiently, from the dew.

And all breakdowns must have some sort of built-in clock because they seem to occur at about 5 PM, be it on Standard time or Daylight time, so that I cannot get the parts necessary to make a repair, until the next day, regardless of whether the time is "Standard" or "Daylight" according to my experience. :(


Ed
 

Dale-c

Active Member
DST is a is just plain silly.
We finally got it here in Indiana in 2006 after years without it.

The pushed it through here for so called "economic reasons" yet we are now seeing many drive in theaters going out of business or only opening on weekends.

One county in Indiana switched to DST and Central time from eastern at the same day in 2006.
The local businesses ignored it and the local goverment, though technically observing it, shifted their hours to 7-4 to compensate.

I think that county got switched back to Eastern the 2007.

Daylight Savings Time of course does not save one minute of daylight, it should be called Daylight Shifting Time.

BUt all of that said, I try to just go on and forget about it.
 

BigBossman

Active Member
I voted "Don't Care" because I go back & forth sometimes. I like going home when it is daylight outside at 6:00 PM, but there are times that I like it when it gets dark at 4:30 PM. I guess its just according to what kind of mood I'm in.

I just wish that I lived in one of the cities that doesn't observe Daylight Savings Time or Standard Time. All year long they keep their clocks the same.

I have also wanted to visit Alaska where it can be daylight during the late night hours & can be dark during the daytime hours. I think that would be awesome to experience.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

dcorbett

Active Member
Site Supporter
I voted "I don't care" because I am a 911 operator and I rotate shifts every 28 days, so my sleep time changes accordingly. I sleep when I am tired. <smile>

Last month, I got off work at 6 AM....this month, I go to work at 6 AM.

So everybody stop whining....DST is for those who do outside activities and want longer daylight hours during the warm weather...like the farmers around here who spend 12 hours a day on a tractor.

Debbie Mc
 

Spinach

New Member
It doesn't bother me either way, but my complaint is that the US changes their clocks a couple weeks earlier than Europe. That messes us up.
 

BigBossman

Active Member
Spinach said:
It doesn't bother me either way, but my complaint is that the US changes their clocks a couple weeks earlier than Europe. That messes us up.

I have noticed that. I could be mistaken, but haven't we been setting our clocks forward in April & setting them back in October? It seems as if Daylight Saving Time has been extended by two months. I remember in 2006, it was in April, I forgot to "spring forward" which caused me to be late for work.
 

EdSutton

New Member
dcorbett said:
So everybody stop whining....DST is for those who do outside activities and want longer daylight hours during the warm weather...like the farmers around here who spend 12 hours a day on a tractor.

Debbie Mc
Personally, I'm a farmer and more than ready for some of that warm weather you spoke of.

Around here, "Global Warming" apparently missed the Memo. :rolleyes:

Ed
 

EdSutton

New Member
Have any of you noticed that the BB goofs up the time change, at least during "DST" on "Eastern Time" as the 'system clock' now reads 7:40 AM, while it is actually 9:40 AM, as I post?

When we were on "standard time" the system was correct, for Eastern time.

Apparently the BB computer programmer "springs backward, then falls forward" somehow. :BangHead:

:laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

Ed
 

Dale-c

Active Member
There is no true benefit to DST.
It is contrived.
If you want to get home sooner, just start work an hour sooner.
it has the same effect with out messing with the clocks.

It has been more difficult for me to get up early in the summer ever since DST went into effect in Indiana in 2006.
 

PamelaK

New Member
It doesn't really matter - I just don't like changing the times! But I admit, Fall is easier - lol. I really prefer the dark as much as possible - probably because my eyes are so sensitive - but since I don't live way up north where it's dark for half the year, I'm kind of out of luck.
 

Marcia

Active Member
Steven2006 said:
I believe the real benefit behind it is to save us energy usage.


Then why do it during the spring and summer months when the days are longer? If this were the purpose, they'd do it in the winter.

The real reason is so that people can play golf later. I am not kidding.
 

rbell

Active Member
Dale-c said:
DST is a is just plain silly.
We finally got it here in Indiana in 2006 after years without it.


I think that county got switched back to Eastern the 2007.

Southern Indiana was the most confusing place on the planet for some time.

Until recently, you had places in Indiana...
  • In the Central time zone, that did observe DST.
  • In the Eastern time zone, that did observe DST.
  • In the Central time zone, that did not observe DST.
  • In the Eastern time zone, that did not observe DST.
When I would talk with someone in Indiana (particularly southern Indiana), I learned to simply ask, "What time is it right now where you are?

Otherwise, when filling in at a church, there was no telling how early or late I would be... :D
 

ILoveTheLord

New Member
I absolutely hate daylight savings time! It messes me up twice each year. When it begins and then again when it ends. I really hate it when it begins because I hate losing that extra hour of sleep. I don't understand why they can't keep it the same I mean really how much energy are we saving?
 
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