Soldato
- Joined
- 10 May 2004
- Posts
- 13,073
- Location
- Sunny Stafford
So basically, we'll move into the same time zone as Europe, and today being the longest day of the year means that it doesn't get completely dark until 00:00.
See are you one of these people who believe in S.A.D.? I don't really think I have a preference to light or dark, I love being out really late at night just wish my job was more suited to it lol
KaHn
It won't be nice for the night workers when they have to work the extra 2 hours , A 14 hour shift for me !!
Offset the proposed CO2 benefits with the extra school run journeys made because so many parents will not want their child walking to school alone in the dark.
On another note, if Scottish people aren't happy about it not getting light until 9am, why not leave them changing the clocks and have a time zone at the border?
I don't have a problem with it, it's either going to be dark at the start of the day or the end of the day so it makes no difference.On another note, if Scottish people aren't happy about it not getting light until 9am, why not leave them changing the clocks and have a time zone at the border?
I don't understand how it's going to make the roads safer, surely the morning commute is likely to be in the dark now? -> more accidents, more NHS ££
Surely it would be darker in the morning meaning most of those benefits are instantly cancelled out?
Id like a lighter earlier campaign, waking up in winter when its still dark ~7-8 is horrible.
It's been tried before and didn't work then.
In the middle of winter there is finite daylight hours, it doesnt get light here until 7.30 and is completely dark at 16.30 - changing it by an hour does nothing.
I think it's the case more people in winter currently travel home in the dark. Once it's dark at 4.30pm (after the clocks change) then practicularly everybody is travelling home in the dark.
Even with it not getting light until 8.30 in the morning you will have quite I few people still travelling in daylight.
I don't think is so much to do with the depths of winter, more maximising the daylight in the evening during spring/autumn to make better use of it.