kevinmccune
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
Very good explination.
I have never understood that farmer objection. The animals and crops don't know or care what time it is. Why wouldn't the farmer simply time his day according to the needs of his farm? Okay, I realize sometimes the farmer has to visit the feed store, and doesn't want to arrive too late, but why else? Anyhow, my wife doesn't like me to bike to my old-peoples' social hour (always at a local brew pub, yay!) during dark afternoons. DLT will be great for my bike riding when it comes in a few weeks.I never met a farmer who liked DST, my Uncle always said" the Day is already too long sometimes"( small farmer)
Charles Darwin was the one who figured this out, and wrote about it. And of course he was right, as he was about many things.Atolls are both of those things. The geobiological dynamic involved is absolutely amazing.
Atolls start out as coral reefs around the above-water summits of huge seafloor volcanos — often in open ocean with otherwise little sea life, as in the tropical Central Pacific. During the active volcanic phase and long after, seawater circulating through the porous volcanic rock picks up heat and mineral nutrients that feed the growing reef and ultimately all the marine life it attracts and depends on. The volcano becomes a bustling oasis in an ocean desert.
Meanwhile, the growing volcano slowly subsides under its own weight, and the well-fed fringing coral reef — a synbiosis between coral polyps and photosynthetic algae — grows upward toward the sunlight the algae require.
Once the volcanic activity ceases, the above-water summit eventually erodes/subsides away. But the subsidence, hydrothermal circulation, and upward reef growth continue for many thousands to millions of years. Eventual result: A coral atoll with the volcanic mountain at its base now completely out of sight from the air.
Zoom in on the many Central Pacific island chains (all volcanic) with Google Earth, and you'll see all phases of this dynamic. The Society Islands are a good place to start. The transition from Tahiti (young, tall dormant volcanic mountaintop, young reef) westward to older Moorea (eroding inactive mountain, well-developed fringing reef and lagoon) and finally to much older Bora Bora (little subaerial mountain left, atoll in the making) is textbook.
I have never understood that farmer objection. The animals and crops don't know or care what time it is. Why wouldn't the farmer simply time his day according to the needs of his farm? Okay, I realize sometimes the farmer has to visit the feed store, and doesn't want to arrive too late, but why else? Anyhow, my wife doesn't like me to bike to my old-peoples' social hour (always at a local brew pub, yay!) during dark afternoons. DLT will be great for my bike riding when it comes in a few weeks.
the day is already long enough in the summer,hard physical labor makes a day seem endless,get some calluses and get up with the birds,life is so soft these daysI have never understood that farmer objection. The animals and crops don't know or care what time it is. Why wouldn't the farmer simply time his day according to the needs of his farm? Okay, I realize sometimes the farmer has to visit the feed store, and doesn't want to arrive too late, but why else? Anyhow, my wife doesn't like me to bike to my old-peoples' social hour (always at a local brew pub, yay!) during dark afternoons. DLT will be great for my bike riding when it comes in a few weeks.
My foggy brain has trouble working it out sometimes,still have trouble with left and right, maybe a few more crashes and wacks on the head will solve itI don't work now, so it's not a big problem for me, but I hated clock changes with a passion.
If only for the mental gymnastics of trying to work out if it back or forwards that gives you an extra hour in bed.
We found it easiest to look at cell phone in the morning and change clocks that don't match, to match.If only for the mental gymnastics of trying to work out if it back or forwards that gives you an extra hour in bed.
Reason to have a third time change. Lol20 years ago, I was in Alaska in June and thought to visit the local golf course after 10PM to see if I could rent some clubs. It was closed and people were sleeping!
" Adopting a standard, whether it's ST or DST, would eliminate all this confusion."Except for the Navajo reservation in AZ which does observe DST.
I find Arizona's no DST policy to be more confusing than not in my travels around the southwest. I often fly into Phoenix and drive to Paige AZ. In the summer months, you actually pass through 5 time changes on the trip as you pass through portions of the Navajo reservation! Paige, which is surrounded by the Navajo Nation, doesn't observe DST. It's also very close to the Utah border where DST is observed. Driving around the Paige area, I'm never really sure what time it is.
Adopting a standard, whether it's ST or DST, would eliminate all this confusion.
I think we should do away with time altogether. Whose idea was it, anyway??
Sure, everything would happen all at once. But no more waiting, no more deadlines, no work hours, no alarm clocks.
;^}
Thank God I found this thread. I just figured out why my clocks are wrong half the year.