Daylight saving time is coming. As you prepare for a time change or to 'fall back', learn more about the origins of this ...
For over a century, Americans have practiced changing their clocks back and ahead to savor an extra hour of sleep and an extra hour of daylight. With fall in full swing and October nearing its end, ...
Halloween, celebrated on Oct. 31, marks a cross-quarter day between equinox and solstice, coinciding with daylight savings ending on Nov. 3.
The clocks went back in the UK last weekend, and will do the same in America this Sunday, but have you ever thought about ...
For many, the best thing about this weekend’s time change is the chance to gain an extra hour of sleep. It’s officially “fall back” time at 2 a.m. Sunday. But after you set the clocks back one hour, ...
While dark mornings are inevitable in winter, turning the clocks back gives us an extra hour of natural light. At least 15 ...
After severe weather last night, we had quite a bit of rainfall but shaping up to having a great Halloween. Rain amounts vary ...
But most importantly, daylight saving time’s end is near. The days will start getting darker sooner when folks set their ...
In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Uniform Time Act, passed by Congress, to officially establish DST in the U.S.
As people across the UK roll their clocks back to GMT on Sunday morning, there's one clock that will always show the wrong ...