Greetings fellow dialists,
I came across this oddity in the (London) "Guardian" on Thursday 16 Nov.
sent in by Hillary Shaw of the Geography Dept., Leeds University: I
hadn't really registered that the equation of time could span half an
hour over the year.

The piece reads: In the last week of October, when the clocks go back,
sunrise to sunset (London) is from about 6.45 to 1645 GMT, 10 hours of
daylight. In spring we again have 10 hours of daylight around mid-
February when sunrise to sunset is from 7.17 to 1715 GMT although the
February day has a much later sunrise. December 21 may be the shortest
day but the year's earliest sunset actually comes around December 12 and
the latest sunrise is around December 30. It is darker mornings that
affect the timing of the change between BST (DST) AND GMT.... So in
October we keep BST till sunrise has reached as late as 7.45.... And we
don't put the clocks forward in mid-February when again we have the same
total daylight hours as in late October because sunrise would then be as
late as 8.15 on the first morning of BST.

(In Scotland, where the effects of BST on sunrise are even more
pronounced in longer dark mornings there is substantial opposition to
the added hour of BST. Perhaps we should return to sundial time.)

Frank 55N 1W
-- 
Frank Evans

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