The true answer to why the United States uses it is because they learned it from the Germans in WWII. The Germans used it as a means to attack later in the day hoping to catch the enemy off guard as they prepared for night fall. Some areas of our country do not observe daylight savings such as Arizona and some towns in Ohio and Indiana.
2006-06-19 19:05:39
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answer #1
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answered by Rycher 1
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Daylight savings time does not give plants an extra hour of daylight. The sun stays up for the same number of hours regardless of whether you're observing DST or not. The last time I checked, plants don't know how to tell time.
DST is for the convenience of humans, and to save energy. During the summer, our days (at least in the NY/NJ area) extend to around 9pm, giving people time to get home from work and still enjoy the outdoors in the light.
2006-06-19 11:57:58
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answer #2
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answered by Flyboy 6
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Some places change the time basis in the summer so that the time people are normally awake coincides better with the time the sun is up.
For instance, in my state, in the spring, we all change our clocks forward one hour. That way, our time is latter than it would have been if we had not switched to daylight savings time.
What would have been 7 oclock yesterday, is 8 oclock today. That way when we wake up at 8 oclock, the sun is at the place it would have been at 7 oclock so you get a whole extra hour of sunniness.
Before winter we switch back because there aren't enough daylight hours and getting up earlier compared to the sun is just depressing.
2006-06-19 10:55:54
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answer #3
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answered by enginerd 6
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Please tell me this can be a comic book tale, and also you're not any further truly that ignorant! daylight hours fee reductions time is only a convenience to commerce. that is a measurement, a counting device, no longer having the slightest effect on the particular international temperature. Oh wait, allow me imagine about this. perchance it does. As you comprehend, once the solar is going down, the air and the floor of the floor start up to relax off. So at the same time as the evening rush hour occurs after sundown, probable it provides you a lot less more effective warmth, via the indisputable fact that is being cooled through the cooler air. perchance if as a substitute of daylight hours fee reductions time, we had darkness fee reductions time . . . yet then the morning rush hour is likewise moved ahead . . . your question is giving me a headache.
2016-11-14 23:57:49
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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I read that Daylight Savings Time started with farmers who used the extra daylight hours to tend to their crops.
I think it's interesting that not all countries adhere to Daylight Savings Time. Even some states in the USA do not change their hours back and forth.
2006-06-20 07:29:21
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answer #5
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answered by DrPepprGrl 2
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Daylight Saving Time is a period during which many countries change their clocks (generally one hour ahead of standard time). This "moves" the working hours of the day to the same time that the sun is up, conserving energy, and making things like driving safer.
If you live near the equator, you've may never have heard of it - your days are almost always 12 hours of daylight, year-round.
The website below explains it all better than I ever could.
2006-06-19 10:37:08
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answer #6
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answered by ichthysapiens 2
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It's to balance daylight with the times we work/go to school. To give us daylight to do things in the evening instead of sleep away to daylight.
2006-06-19 10:24:56
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answer #7
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answered by erin7 7
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The purpose for Daylight savings time is to give plants an extra hour of sun during the main growing season.
Without that extra hour of sun plants would NOT grow as much as they do under Daylight savings time
2006-06-19 10:43:10
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answer #8
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answered by rjjensenia 2
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