Should they go to year-round Daylight Saving Time? Scotland says no:
Britain currently sets its clocks at Greenwich Mean Time in fall and an hour ahead of that in spring. (New York is generally five hours behind Britain; Western Europe is an hour ahead).
The problem is that while a clock change might bring afternoon joy to London, it would condemn Inverness in the far reaches of Scotland — in relative terms, about 700 miles north of Montreal — to long, dark winter mornings with sunrises as late as 10 a.m.
Even worse, many Scots feel, it would mean giving in to English politicians. Though the devolution of British politics has given Scotland its own legislature and responsibility for many of its own affairs, the clock is still controlled by Parliament in London.
(You can see what sunrises and sunsets would look like up there at Weather Now.)
Daylight Saving Time has generated controversy for almost a century now, with good and bad arguments on both sides. I'm almost indifferent, though I do get annoyed waking up in the dark at the beginning of November.
Welcome to the semi-annual update of the
Chicago sunrise chart. (You can get one for your own location at
http://www.wx-now.com/Sunrise/SunriseChart.aspx.)
Date
|
Significance
|
Sunrise
|
Sunset
|
Daylight
|
2011
|
3 Jan
|
Latest sunrise until Oct. 29th
|
07:19
|
16:32
|
9:13
|
27 Jan
|
5pm sunset
|
07:08
|
17:00
|
9:51
|
5 Feb
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
17:11
|
10:11
|
20 Feb
|
5:30pm sunset
|
06:40
|
17:30
|
10:50
|
27 Feb
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:29
|
17:39
|
11:09
|
12 Mar
|
Earliest sunrise until Apr. 17th
Earliest sunset until Oct. 26th
|
06:08
|
17:54
|
11:45
|
13 Mar
|
Daylight savings time begins
Latest sunrise until Oct. 19th
Earliest sunset until Sept. 19th
|
07:07
|
18:55
|
11:48
|
17 Mar
|
7am sunrise, 7pm sunset
12-hour day
|
06:59
|
19:00
|
12:00
|
20 Mar
|
Equinox 18:21 CDT
|
06:55
|
19:03
|
12:08
|
3 Apr
|
6:30am sunrise (again)
|
06:29
|
19:20
|
12:50
|
13 Apr
|
7:30pm sunset
|
06:14
|
19:30
|
13:15
|
22 Apr
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
19:40
|
13:39
|
11 May
|
8pm sunset
|
05:35
|
20:00
|
14:25
|
16 May
|
5:30am sunrise
|
05:30
|
20:05
|
14:35
|
15 Jun
|
Earliest sunrise of the year
|
05:15
|
20:28
|
15:13
|
21 Jun
|
Solstice 12:16 CDT
8:30pm sunset
|
05:16
|
20:30
|
15:14
|
27 Jun
|
Latest sunset of the year
|
05:18
|
20:31
|
15:12
|
3 Jul
|
8:30pm sunset
|
05:20
|
20:30
|
15:09
|
17 Jul
|
5:30am sunrise
|
05:30
|
20:24
|
14:53
|
9 Aug
|
8pm sunset
|
05:53
|
20:00
|
14:06
|
17 Aug
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
19:48
|
13:48
|
29 Aug
|
7:30pm sunset
|
06:13
|
19:30
|
13:16
|
15 Sep
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:30
|
19:01
|
12:30
|
16 Sep
|
7pm sunset
|
06:32
|
18:59
|
12:27
|
23 Sep
|
Equinox, 03:05 CDT
|
06:39
|
18:49
|
12:10
|
26 Sep
|
12-hour day
|
06:42
|
18:42
|
12:00
|
3 Oct
|
6:30pm sunset
|
06:50
|
18:30
|
11:39
|
13 Oct
|
7am sunrise
|
07:01
|
18:13
|
11:12
|
22 Oct
|
6pm sunset
|
07:11
|
17:59
|
10:48
|
5 Nov
|
Latest sunrise until 5 Nov 2016
Latest sunset until Feb 29th
|
07:28
|
17:40
|
10:12
|
6 Nov
|
Standard time returns
6:30am sunrise
Earliest sunrise until Feb 28th
|
06:29
|
16:39
|
10:10
|
16 Nov
|
4:30pm sunset
|
06:41
|
16:30
|
9:47
|
2 Dec
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
16:21
|
9:20
|
8 Dec
|
Earliest sunset of the year
|
07:06
|
16:20
|
9:14
|
21 Dec
|
Solstice, 23:30 CST
|
07:15
|
16:23
|
9:08
|
You can get sunrise information
for your location at wx-now.com.
The earth will cast its shadow on the moon Monday night:
But on the longest night of the year, a full moon will disappear at 1:40 a.m. behind the Earth's shadow. There won't be another total lunar eclipse on the night of the winter solstice for 84 years.
Weather permitting — and the forecast isn't favorable in the Chicago area, calling for clouds building Monday and snow overnight — the eclipse will be visible everywhere in the continental United States, and at its darkest, the moon will be halfway up from the horizon in the south-southwest sky.
We'll be able to see the moon start to disappear around 12:30 am Central time, with a total eclipse from 1:40 am until 2:53 am.
Unfortunately, the weather forecast calls for snow, which in Chicago just makes everything look yellow. (Chicago uses sodium-vapor streetlights that cast banana-yellow light.) But if you're up, or you live west of here and have better weather, go out and look.
It's getting on toward 7:30 in Chicago, and the sun still hasn't risen yet. We return to standard time tonight, meaning the sun will rise at 6:30 tomorrow. Today, however, will be the latest sunrise in Chicago (and in the rest of those parts of the U.S. that observe daylight saving time) until 2021.
What's wrong with the last weekend in October? Or, as they do in parts of Europe, the last weekend in September? The "extra" hour of daylight in the evening has to come from somewhere. I, for one, prefer staying out after dark to waking up before dawn.
It's time for the semi-annual update of the Chicago sunrise chart. (You can get one for your own location at http://www.wx-now.com/Sunrise/SunriseChart.aspx.) I'm a little late with the mid-year update because I've been a little busy. You haven't missed much—and anyway, they overlap.
An interesting note about 2010: the sunset on November 6th will be the latest sunrise in Chicago (7:30am) until 2021—and that, only within 4 seconds of precision.
Date |
Significance |
Sunrise |
Sunset |
Daylight |
2010 |
2 Jul |
8:30pm sunset |
05:20 |
20:30 |
15:10 |
17 Jul |
5:30am sunrise |
05:30 |
20:23 |
14:52 |
9 Aug |
8pm sunset |
05:53 |
20:00 |
14:06 |
16 Aug |
6am sunrise |
06:00 |
19:50 |
13:49 |
29 Aug |
7:30pm sunset |
06:14 |
19:29 |
13:16 |
14 Sep |
6:30am sunrise |
06:30 |
19:02 |
12:31 |
15 Sep |
7pm sunset |
06:31 |
19:00 |
12:29 |
22 Sep |
Equinox, 22:09 CDT |
06:38 |
18:48 |
12:10 |
25 Sep |
12-hour day |
06:41 |
18:43 |
12:00 |
3 Oct |
6:30pm sunset |
06:50 |
18:29 |
11:39 |
12 Oct |
7am sunrise |
07:00 |
18:14 |
11:14 |
21 Oct |
6pm sunset |
07:10 |
18:00 |
10:50 |
6 Nov |
Latest sunrise until 6 Nov 2021 Latest sunset until Feb 28th |
07:30 |
17:39 |
10:09 |
7 Nov |
Standard time returns Earliest sunrise until Mar 3rd |
06:31 |
16:38 |
10:07 |
15 Nov |
4:30pm sunset |
06:40 |
16:30 |
9:49 |
2 Dec |
7am sunrise |
07:00 |
16:20 |
9:20 |
8 Dec |
Earliest sunset of the year |
07:06 |
16:20 |
9:14 |
21 Dec |
Solstice, 17:38 CST |
07:15 |
16:23 |
9:08 |
2011 |
3 Jan |
Latest sunrise until Oct. 29th |
07:19 |
16:32 |
9:13 |
27 Jan |
5pm sunset |
07:08 |
17:00 |
9:51 |
5 Feb |
7am sunrise |
07:00 |
17:11 |
10:11 |
20 Feb |
5:30pm sunset |
06:40 |
17:30 |
10:50 |
27 Feb |
6:30am sunrise |
06:29 |
17:39 |
11:09 |
12 Mar |
Earliest sunrise until Apr. 17th Earliest sunset until Oct. 26th |
06:08 |
17:54 |
11:45 |
13 Mar |
Daylight savings time begins Latest sunrise until Oct. 19th Earliest sunset until Sept. 19th |
07:07 |
18:55 |
11:48 |
17 Mar |
7am sunrise, 7pm sunset 12-hour day |
07:00 |
19:00 |
12:00 |
20 Mar |
Equinox 18:21 CDT |
06:55 |
19:03 |
12:08 |
4 Apr |
6:30am sunrise (again) |
06:29 |
19:20 |
12:50 |
13 Apr |
7:30pm sunset |
06:14 |
19:30 |
13:15 |
22 Apr |
6am sunrise |
06:00 |
19:40 |
13:39 |
11 May |
8pm sunset |
05:35 |
20:00 |
14:25 |
16 May |
5:30am sunrise |
05:30 |
20:05 |
14:35 |
15 Jun |
Earliest sunrise of the year |
05:15 |
20:28 |
15:13 |
21 Jun |
Solstice 12:16 CDT 8:30pm sunset |
05:16 |
20:30 |
15:14 |
27 Jun |
Latest sunset of the year |
05:18 |
20:31 |
15:13 |
You can get sunrise information for your location at wx-now.com.
Tomorrow morning's sunrise is the earliest of the year in Chicago.
This bit of useless information was brought to you by the letter Q and the number 5.
Since I'm spending so much time here, I thought I should do a
Raleigh sunrise chart to complement the one
for Chicago. (You can get one for your own location at
http://www.wx-now.com/Sunrise/SunriseChart.aspx.)
An interesting note about 2010: the sunset on November 6th will be the latest sunrise
for most places in the U.S. (7:43 am in Raliegh) until 2021.
Date
|
Significance
|
Sunrise
|
Sunset
|
Daylight
|
2010
|
6 Jan
|
Latest sunrise until Mar. 14th
|
07:26
|
17:17
|
9:50
|
20 Jan
|
5:30pm sunset
|
07:23
|
17:30
|
10:07
|
17 Feb
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
17:59
|
10:59
|
18 Feb
|
6pm sunset
|
06:59
|
18:00
|
11:00
|
12 Mar
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:30
|
18:20
|
11:49
|
13 Mar
|
Earliest sunrise until Apr. 26th
Earliest sunset until Oct. 31st
|
06:29
|
18:21
|
11:52
|
14 Mar
|
Daylight savings time begins
Latest sunrise until Oct. 22nd
Earliest sunset until Sept. 16th
|
07:28
|
19:22
|
11:54
|
17 Mar
|
12-hour day
|
07:24
|
19:25
|
12:01
|
20 Mar
|
Equinox 13:32 EDT
|
07:19
|
19:27
|
12:08
|
23 Mar
|
7:30pm sunset
|
07:15
|
19:30
|
12:15
|
3 Apr
|
7am sunrise
|
06:59
|
19:39
|
12:40
|
25 Apr
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:30
|
19:57
|
13:27
|
28 Apr
|
8pm sunset
|
06:27
|
20:00
|
13:33
|
3 Jun
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
20:27
|
14:27
|
7 Jun
|
8:30pm sunset
|
05:59
|
20:30
|
14:31
|
12 Jun
|
Earliest sunrise of the year
|
05:58
|
20:33
|
14:34
|
21 Jun
|
Solstice 07:28 EDT
|
05:59
|
20:35
|
14:35
|
24 Jun
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
20:35
|
14:35
|
28 Jun
|
Latest sunset of the year
|
06:01
|
20:36
|
14:34
|
19 Jul
|
8:30pm sunset
|
06:13
|
20:30
|
14:16
|
10 Aug
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:30
|
20:11
|
13:39
|
20 Aug
|
8pm sunset
|
06:38
|
20:00
|
13:21
|
10 Sep
|
7:30pm sunset
|
06:54
|
19:30
|
12:36
|
18 Sep
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
19:18
|
12:18
|
22 Sep
|
Equinox, 23:09 EDT
|
07:03
|
19:13
|
12:10
|
26 Sep
|
12-hour day
|
07:07
|
19:07
|
12:00
|
1 Oct
|
7pm sunset
|
07:10
|
18:59
|
11:48
|
23 Oct
|
6:30pm sunset
|
07:29
|
18:30
|
11:00
|
24 Oct
|
7:30am sunrise
|
07:30
|
18:29
|
10:58
|
6 Nov
|
Latest sunrise until 6 Nov 2021
Latest sunset until Mar 7th
|
07:43
|
18:15
|
10:32
|
7 Nov
|
Standard time returns
Earliest sunrise until Mar 3rd
|
06:44
|
17:14
|
10:30
|
23 Nov
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
17:04
|
10:04
|
5 Dec
|
Earliest sunset of the year
|
07:11
|
17:02
|
9:51
|
21 Dec
|
Solstice, 18:38 EST
|
07:22
|
17:05
|
9:43
|
You can get sunrise information
for your location at wx-now.com.
...could be today, depending on which competing definition you use:
A blue moon is a full moon that is not timed to the regular monthly pattern. Most years have twelve full moons which occur approximately monthly, but in addition to those twelve full lunar cycles, each solar calendar year contains an excess of roughly eleven days compared to the lunar year. The extra days accumulate, so that every two or three years (7 times in the 19-year Metonic cycle), there is an extra full moon. The extra moon is called a "blue moon." Different definitions place the "extra" moon at different times.
- In calculating the dates for Lent and Easter, the Clergy identify the Lent Moon. It is thought that historically when the moon's timing was too early, they named an earlier moon as a "betrayer moon" (belewe moon), thus the Lent moon came at its expected time.
- Folklore gave each moon a name according to its time of year. A moon which came too early had no folk name – and was called a blue moon – bringing the correct seasonal timings for future moons.
- The Farmers' Almanac defined blue moon as an extra full moon that occurred in a season; one season was normally three full moons. If a season had four full moons, then the third full moon was named a blue moon.
- Recent popular usage defined a blue moon as the second full moon in a calendar month, stemming from an interpretation error made in 1946 that was discovered in 1999. For example, December 31, 2009 would be a blue moon according to this usage.
So, it's possible today's full moon is a blue moon. Or it's possible the next blue moon will occur November 21st. Or after some volcanic eruption which hasn't happened yet.
Regardless, enjoy it if you can. It only happens...infrequently.
It's time for the semi-annual update of the
Chicago sunrise chart. (You can get one for your own location at
http://www.wx-now.com/Sunrise/SunriseChart.aspx.)
An interesting note about 2010: the sunset on November 6th will be the latest sunrise in Chicago (7:30am) until 2021—and that, only within 4 seconds of precision.
Date
|
Significance
|
Sunrise
|
Sunset
|
Daylight
|
2010
|
3 Jan
|
Latest sunrise until Oct. 29th
|
07:19
|
16:33
|
9:14
|
27 Jan
|
5pm sunset
|
07:08
|
17:00
|
9:51
|
4 Feb
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
17:10
|
10:09
|
20 Feb
|
5:30pm sunset
|
06:39
|
17:30
|
10:50
|
27 Feb
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:29
|
17:39
|
11:09
|
13 Mar
|
Earliest sunrise until Apr. 18th
Earliest sunset until Oct. 25th
|
06:06
|
17:55
|
11:49
|
14 Mar
|
Daylight savings time begins
Latest sunrise until Oct. 17th
Earliest sunset until Sept. 18th
|
07:04
|
18:56
|
11:52
|
17 Mar
|
7am sunrise, 7pm sunset
12-hour day
|
06:59
|
19:00
|
12:00
|
20 Mar
|
Equinox 12:32 CDT
|
06:54
|
19:04
|
12:09
|
3 Apr
|
6:30am sunrise (again)
|
06:30
|
19:19
|
12:48
|
13 Apr
|
7:30pm sunset
|
06:14
|
19:30
|
13:16
|
22 Apr
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
19:40
|
13:40
|
11 May
|
8pm sunset
|
05:35
|
20:01
|
14:25
|
16 May
|
5:30am sunrise
|
05:30
|
20:06
|
14:35
|
14 Jun
|
Earliest sunrise of the year
|
05:15
|
20:28
|
15:12
|
21 Jun
|
Solstice 06:28 CDT
8:30pm sunset
|
05:16
|
20:30
|
15:14
|
27 Jun
|
Latest sunset of the year
|
05:18
|
20:31
|
15:12
|
2 Jul
|
8:30pm sunset
|
05:20
|
20:30
|
15:10
|
17 Jul
|
5:30am sunrise
|
05:30
|
20:23
|
14:52
|
9 Aug
|
8pm sunset
|
05:53
|
20:00
|
14:06
|
16 Aug
|
6am sunrise
|
06:00
|
19:50
|
13:49
|
29 Aug
|
7:30pm sunset
|
06:14
|
19:29
|
13:16
|
14 Sep
|
6:30am sunrise
|
06:30
|
19:02
|
12:31
|
15 Sep
|
7pm sunset
|
06:31
|
19:00
|
12:29
|
22 Sep
|
Equinox, 22:09 CDT
|
06:38
|
18:48
|
12:10
|
25 Sep
|
12-hour day
|
06:41
|
18:43
|
12:00
|
3 Oct
|
6:30pm sunset
|
06:50
|
18:29
|
11:39
|
12 Oct
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
18:14
|
11:14
|
21 Oct
|
6pm sunset
|
07:10
|
18:00
|
10:50
|
6 Nov
|
Latest sunrise until 6 Nov 2021
Latest sunset until Feb 28th
|
07:30
|
17:39
|
10:09
|
7 Nov
|
Standard time returns
Earliest sunrise until Mar 3rd
|
06:31
|
16:38
|
10:07
|
15 Nov
|
4:30pm sunset
|
06:40
|
16:30
|
9:49
|
2 Dec
|
7am sunrise
|
07:00
|
16:20
|
9:20
|
8 Dec
|
Earliest sunset of the year
|
07:06
|
16:20
|
9:14
|
21 Dec
|
Solstice, 17:38 CST
|
07:15
|
16:23
|
9:08
|
You can get sunrise information
for your location at wx-now.com.
A number of confusing changes occurred to the world while I slept:
- President Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize. I love the man; I voted for him; I gave lots of money[1] to two of his campaigns. I'm still confused. It might offend some of my fellow progressives to say, but possibly the prize means nothing more than "thank you for not being like the last guy, and keep up the good work." The President is, in fact, the second person who is not George W. Bush to win the Prize in the last four years.
- For reasons which passeth all understanding[2], we crashed a rocket into the moon. We want to find out if the moon has enough water to make long-term habitation possible. Otherwise, we'll have to build a pipeline from the Great Lakes, which poses certain engineering challenges.
- Both of these stories came to me during WBEZ-Chicago's pledge week, which started yesterday. Please, I beg all my readers in Chicago, please make a donation so they'll stop begging. The only glimmer of good news in the timing of the Fall pledge drive comes in the form of an exquisite torture perpetrated upon me and my 118 classmates by Fuqua. I won't be able to listen to much NPR this weekend because:
- I have two final exams due this weekend, both take-home, one 90 minutes long and the other with 24 hours to complete. (The clock starts when we download the exams from the school's web portal.) The professor for exam #1 says it's relatively straightforward, everyone will pass, don't worry. The professor for exam #2, who served six years on the Financial Accounting Standards Board and who drafted important regulations of the accounting profession itself, says "someone who is reasonably prepared and who doesn't need to use notes should be able to complete it in 4 or 5 hours." So, a former FASB member who's taught accounting for 30 years will find it "challenging." One hundred eighteen people started crying. (One dude in our class is an accountant who got 117 out of 120 on the midterm.)
- The U.S. dollar continues to slide slowly into uncomfortable depths. I got an alert while writing this entry that the Canadian dollar has risen against our currency from a low of 76c in March to 95c today. We're also slipping against the Euro and the Yen, but not, I'm happy to say, against Sterling or the Emirati Dirham, the two currencies I'm concerned about in the next few weeks.[3]
- Finally, a dear friend from North Carolina sent a delightful finals-weekend care package to Parker and me, including doggie fortune cookies and human chocolate-chip cookies. And now Parker has the whole world in his paws (see below).
[1] Lots for me, anyway; NPR wouldn't have given me a mug for the amount I gave.
[2] Aaron Sorkin's favorite phrase, from Phillippans 4:7. Yes, athiests quote Bible verses sometimes.
[3] I'm concerned because I'm about to go to Dubai, via London, for school. The Dirham hasn't changed because it's pegged to the dollar...for now.