Friday, March 9, 2012

WE DON'T CHANGE OUR CLOCK IN ARIZONA THIS WEEKEND

Here in Arizona, as well as Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands - we don't need to worry about changing our clocks at anytime during the year.. But remember, if you travel elsewhere, they will be changing their's this weekend... So Sunday we will be the same time as California & Nevada until November...

Yes, for the rest of country (and many parts of the world) they will be setting their clocks AHEAD ONE HOUR before going to bed THIS WEEKEND - TOMORROW EVENING, SATURDAY, March 10th, 2012. Spring's daylight saving time begins this Sunday, March 11th at 2 am

They will then "fall back" on Sunday, November 4th, 2012 2am., at which time California & Nevada will be one hour behind us again...

Despite the change they make to their clocks and watches, almost all computers, cable boxes and other satellite services (including those for smart phones, cell phones, blackberry’s, dish & satellite TV services) will make this change automatically without any help..
Visit this website to learn what other parts of the world change their clocks:

For those of you who wonder how DST began, here are some tidbits about its origins and pros and cons of these time-changing events. According to lots of sources on the Internet, several events led to our modern-day DST:
Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding fathers, suggested something akin to daylight saving time in a 1784 essay

During World War I in an effort to conserve fuel needed to produce electric power, Germany and Austria began saving daylight by advancing the hands of the clock one hour from April through October
A postal clerk from New Zealand was the first to propose modern DST

Congress first put America's clocks ahead one hour during World War I and (later for WWII)

Congress enacted the Uniform Time Act of 1966 to eliminate confusion about DST across the country-thanks to this act, DST in the United States now begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November

No comments:

Post a Comment