[Magdalen] Time is -- uh ....

Jon Egger revegger at gmail.com
Mon Nov 2 18:42:38 UTC 2015


What David said brought back a VA memory.  The sun was in my eyes going to
work and coming home the entire year long. It was not fun.

Grace and peace,
brud

On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 12:34 PM, Joseph Cirou <romanos at mindspring.com>
wrote:

> I have noticed, especially in DST that our sunsets in Atlanta are later
> than those in Chicago 700 miles to the north; that may be because we are
> not that far from central time zone--next state in Alabama or 200 miles nw
> in Ann Markles former stamping grounds in Crossville, TN\
>
> Joe
>
> -----Original Message-----
> >From: Charles Wohlers <charles.wohlers at verizon.net>
> >Sent: Nov 2, 2015 1:29 PM
> >To: magdalen at herberthouse.org
> >Subject: Re: [Magdalen] Time is -- uh ....
> >
> >Also depends greatly on whether you're on the eastern or western edge of
> the
> >time zone. So sunsets and sunrises in Michigan are about an hour later
> than
> >those in Maine. Same with Omaha vs. Chicago.
> >
> >For example, sunset here today is at 4:40; however, where Judy is in
> >Michigan (due west of here), it's 5:29 - nearly an hour later. And just
> >across the lake in Green Bay (CST), it's 4:40 again.
> >
> >Chad Wohlers
> >Woodbury, VT USA
> >chadwohl at satucket.com
> >
> >
> >Kate -
> >
> >You maybe worked in Duluth?  Or Bellingham, WA, or Portland, ME?
> >
> >I'm not sure the winter sun goes down that early much to the south of
> >these latitudes.  In NE Pennsylvania, the mid-winter sun goes  down
> >at about 4:35 PM, which meant that if I got out of the VA at 4:30  PM,
> >I'd have a small amount of daylight and then twilight for the half  hour
> >trip up the mountain.  With DST, it would be daylight for the  whole
> >trip.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >David Strang.
> >
>
>
>
>


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