I've been to Atlantic Canada many times, and Newfoundland once, and can vouch for that. You set your watch ahead an hour crossing the bridge between Calais Maine and St Stephen NB, and another half-hour taking the ferry between North Sydney Nova Scotia and Port-O-Basques Newfoundland.
Unforunately I never made it as far as St. Pierre and Miquelon, but would like to someday. Nat Nat Hager's webpage http://www.win.net/dorsea/nehager > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On > Behalf Of Bill Potts > Sent: Tuesday, 2002 January 1 14.26 > To: U.S. Metric Association > Subject: [USMA:17084] Re: Celebrations in Maastricht > > > As Jim Frysinger has already pointed out, AST is UTC -0400. > > Newfie time is, therefore, UTC -0330. > > Bill Potts, CMS > Roseville, CA > http://metric1.org [SI Navigator] > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On > Behalf Of Stephen Gallagher > Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2002 09:31 > To: U.S. Metric Association > Subject: [USMA:17077] Re: Celebrations in Maastricht > > > Most of Eastern Canada is in Atlantic Standard Time (UTC-5). > With the exception of Newfoundland which is (UTC - 4.5) > > Stephen Gallagher > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "kilopascal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2002 10:08 AM > Subject: [USMA:17066] Re: Celebrations in Maastricht > > > > 2002-01-01 > > > > I forgot about those two islands. But, they are in the same > time zone as > > the Caribbean Islands that also will use the Euro. From the map I have, > the > > Caribbean and the extreme eastern Canada are in the same time zone; > Atlantic > > Standard Time (AST). Which is UTC-5 this time of year. > > > > John > > >
