hey guys!
i am glad that its dark now early and i can take my flashlights with me for the after-dinner-walk (instead of sunglasses ![]()
i am living 48.472601° N…
hey guys!
i am glad that its dark now early and i can take my flashlights with me for the after-dinner-walk (instead of sunglasses ![]()
i am living 48.472601° N…
Totally !!
l’m at 49.165N, looking forward to winter solstice, for 16 hrs of darkness so I can justify my flashlights ![]()
I was at 53.53N for years, where the winter sun sets after 3pm and rise again at 9am, and before that at 56.72N, winter sun shows on top of trees, skims them, then sets. But I did not have nearly as many lights then I do now, and none of them brighter than 100 lms ![]()
52°21.76'N here, cycling from work to home in the dark already (blf-a6 5A is my bicycle lamp now).
For us, that will be this coming weekend, Oct. 31/Nov. 1.
Yeah finaly! Early dark, more hunting hours for us- and all those jackals are lurking in the shadows waiting

Sweet jackals
I’ve looked everywhere and I can’t find any of the 56 years of daylight time I’ve saved so far. Maybe I need to buy a better flashlight to look with :bigsmile:
Phil
(added: 34’50”40N )
The biggest problem with daylight saving is that the curtains fade a lot quicker. I guess this is still a problem with you guys north of the equator. 
30º52’S :bigsmile:
Very rainy spring… If it continues, transform us into frogs.
I was at the library the day before the changeover and the lady at the check-out counter was looking out the window sadly remarking that it was getting dark already (~5:00pm) and how the next day it would be getting dark ~4:00. She seemed so depressed. 
I told her to get a flashlight and be happy!!! 