I love fall in New York, but the one thing I don't like is that there is so much darkness.  When I wake up, it's dark.  When I get out of work, it's dark.  If I had a magic wand, I would keep all of the amazing things about fall, but we would have summer sunlight.  The good news is that this weekend, on Sunday, November 7, 2021, at 2 am, we will "fall" back.  Changing our clocks will give us more sunlight in the mornings as we are getting ready for work and the kids are heading to school. You'll need to set all of your clocks back an hour - other than your smart devices, which usually do it automatically.  But why?  Why is daylight saving time even a thing?

Arizona, Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, The Northern Mariana Island, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands do not observe daylight saving time.

According to The Old Farmer's Almanac, Daylight Saving Time is all about giving us more light,

Daylight Saving Time is the practice of moving the clocks forward one hour from Standard Time during the summer months and changing them back again in the fall. The general idea is that this allows us all to make better use of natural daylight: moving the clocks forward one hour in the spring grants us more daylight during summer evenings, while moving clocks back one hour in the fall grants us more daylight during winter mornings.

Daylight Saving Time happens annually. It starts at 2 am on the second Sunday in March and ends at 2 am on the first Sunday in November.

The concept was created by William Willet of England,

 In “The Waste of Daylight,” the manifesto of his personal light-saving campaign, Willet wrote, “Everyone appreciates the long, light evenings. Everyone laments their shrinkage as the days grow shorter; and nearly everyone has given utterance to a regret that the nearly clear, bright light of an early morning during Spring and Summer months is so seldom seen or used… . That so many as 210 hours of daylight are, to all intents and purposes, wasted every year is a defect in our civilization. Let England recognise and remedy it.”

So don't forget to set your clocks back this Sunday and don't waste your daylight!

93.7 WBLK logo
Get our free mobile app

 

The Most Head-Scratching List Of Upstate New York Trivia You Have Ever Read!

Wait....is that Mr. Ed in the photo above? What on earth could that talking horse have to do with Upstate New York?

OK...trivia time! Where is the geographic center of New York State? Where are all the lollipop, corn dog, and cotton candy sticks made? Where is the oldest (and shortest) covered bridge in the U.S.? Where is the most visited celebrity grave of all located? Is there really such a thing as a two-story brick outhouse, and if so where the heck is it?

Well, if you answered "Upstate New York" to all of these you are right. And you will definitely enjoy this delicious list of trivia about our region!

Everybody loves a good story, or some head-scratching trivia facts. This list pulls the curtain back on nearly 40 amazing pieces of Upstate New York history you probably didn't know about. Are they earth-shaking? No. Are they interesting? Definitely!

Whatever happened to "that kid" in the Willie Wonka movie? Where was the first grand slam home run in organized baseball hit? Where is the oldest mini-golf in America located? Tell us the story of Binghamton's Kentucky Derby winner! Tell us the story about TV's "Mr. Ed" and his connection to Upstate New York! How could the oldest continuously operating Boy Scout troop be in a tiny Upstate New York village? And what was that controversy over famous singer Kate's Smith's Lake Placid, NY grave all about?

The answer to all of these questions and many more lie in Upstate New York.

Enjoy!

Gallery Credit: Chuck D'Imperio

Stores Closed in WNY on Thanksgiving

 

More From 93.7 WBLK