Hi Margot,


I found myself a little puzzled by your timings.  Have I missed something?
Based on my knowledge that the sun rises in the East and sets in the West,
and the US and Canada are always behind Europe time.  My husband works in a
US based company in England.  His colleagues west of us in other parts of
Europe start work before he does.  He is leaving work for the day in late
afternoon, when his colleagues in the US are still in morning time.  Based
on this, doing the relay from East to West would work better.  I can’t
fathom where the best place for fitting Australia and New Zealand in is,
based on international date line and time zones.



Karen in Coventry

Who will admit it took her a long time to figure out even time differences
between GMT and British Summertime – and only doing Meterological records
for a year at 9am GMT (which is 10am in summertime) fixed it in my brain
properly!



Margot wrote: I'm reading the time zone map correctly, and if the
Australians are

still on their winter time in Sept. while the rest of us are on summer

time; and if the Australians don't mind making lace until late in the

evening and the west coast of North America start early in the morning,

it should be possible to do a rolling/ relay lace day in Sept.  I think

it would mean the Australians making lace until 23:00, the west coast of

North America taking over just before 6:00.  Working across North

America to me at 10:00.  Then the UK would join in at 14:00 and ending

with eastern Europe at 16:00.  (All times local.)




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