Monday, March 29, 2010

Time

As you are probably aware, the clocks went forward this weekend (and if you’re in Britain, I certainly hope you are aware of this or else you are probably late for work!) and the debate has raised its head again of whether we should ditch Greenwich Mean Time and move permanently to British Summer Time or even have a combination of BST and moving forward an hour from that.

I have to say that I am not very pro this suggestion. I know there are arguments about the lives that could be saved, and that is a significant point, and the counter arguments about how we have a uniform time across the UK, people in Scotland would be particularly negatively impacted because they would end up having to do more in the dark i.e. it would still be dark when they got up in the north of Scotland.

We have actually experimented with sticking with BST before – from 1940 to 1945 i.e. during World War 2 (and actually we had Double Summertime, so the clocks went forward a further hour in the summer during that time and then back to BST in the winter), and from February 1968 to October 1971.

The reason I am loathed to give up GMT though is that it is the first formalised time that existed. Until relatively recently we did not have a uniform time across the UK, and that was fine because a few minutes difference the further you headed west was ok because you were moving at no great pace yourself. It just wasn’t very noticeable. However, with the advent of the steam engine, the discrepancies began to matter. People could travel much faster – and I guess it was rather difficult to have a timetable if there was no standard time. Being a few minutes out, as would be the case where people knew the time based on the sun hitting a sundial, could make a significance difference and actually depending on which direction you were travelling you could, presumably end up going back in time. Interesting. Anyway, to overcome this the time in London (Greenwich Mean Time) was taken as the standard time for the country. The UK was the first country to standardise time and after that other countries followed suit, with GMT remaining the “base time”. So to give up GMT, we would actually be giving up a huge piece of history. Maybe that is old fashioned to not want change for the sake of history, but it does seem pretty significant to me and to no longer have GMT in the UK would somehow seem like a step too far.

5 comments:

Cornish Dreamer said...

It's funny how the scrapping of BST always comes up. I don't get it. Changing the times in winter only gives a lasting effect for a couple of weeks at most, and then it still ends up dark and wintery. But I wouldn't give it up, even if it does get darker in London 20 minutes ahead of Cornwall. (Mind you, I could do with my lost hour back...). I tired.

Oh...speaking of time: tomorrow there will be a blog award waiting for you to pick up at my blog. :-)

The Gripes of Wrath said...

But don't you think that there is a very British irony in perhaps choosing to not actually have GMT (even though we actually have the original Greenwich...)?

And it may be a mere 20 minutes darker for London compared with Cornwall - but it feels like the abyss of time has opened up and swallowed Scotland, it is so very dark in winter.

Random Reflections said...

CW- Yes, you're right. The benefits would probably only exist for a fairly marginal period. I do feel hard done by losing an hour's sleep each March - and getting it back later in the year doesn't make up for it.

I shall await tomorrow with curiosity.

Gripes! - I hope you are well. I take your point on irony - that's a polite way of describing us as idiots isn't it?

As much as I like Scotland, I am not sure that I would like the dark winters. An abyss indeed.

Kahless said...

I like GMT is the standard of the world.

Scotland....

where is that?
Does it matter?

Must be an abyss....

Random Reflections said...

Kahless - I am going to Scotland this weekend. I hope that it is not a big black hole. We shall see...