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That's how you catch Sockeye.I notice it, especially losing an hour in the spring switch over. But it has never been that big a deal to me. And I enjoy the later sunsets in the summer. Plus, I'm not an early bird, getting up at O'dark-thirty in the summer is bad enough, and it would be that much worse on standard time. It would feel like getting up in the middle of the night.
It absolutely messes with baby and toddler sleep patterns. That’s my pain point (and the loss of an hour of after-daycare daylight window for going to the park).I've never found it makes much difference. After all, it's dark all late fall and winter here anyways, and the whole sleep thing and loss or gain of an hour is all a bunch of crap.
Are people really that inflexible, and lack some resilience to such a small change ?
Anybody that says it screws up their sleep patterns, or makes them late for stuff needs more help than not changing a clock can provide...seriously...Jesus Weeps here...and any hope for the future of humanity goes right out the window.
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I say split the difference. This spring, let’s spring forward 30 minutes once and for all and call it good.Pick one and stick with it. Arizona seems to survive without messing with time changes.
Washington did pass a law in 2019 to stay on PDT. However, Congress has to amend federal law to allow states to observe daylight savings time year round, which it has yet to do.Pick one and stick with it. Arizona seems to survive without messing with time changes.
They get more sun because TX is bigger. Just ask 'em.I remember reading of the letter received at the National Bureau of Times and Standards from a farmer in Texas complaining about the spring change because the extra hour of sunlight a day was drying up his crops.