Don’t forget to change your clocks tonight

Don’t get caught out tonight – it’s time to change the clocks again for the arrival of British Summer Time (BST).
Clocks change. Watch. Pic Steve Robards SUS-150325-095906001Clocks change. Watch. Pic Steve Robards SUS-150325-095906001
Clocks change. Watch. Pic Steve Robards SUS-150325-095906001

The clocks go one hour forward tomorrow, Sunday 29, March 2015 at 1am, heralding in BST, lighter nights and (hopefully) better weather as spring gets well underway.

The clocks go back again in autumn in the early hours of Sunday, October 25.

Interesting facts about British Summer Time:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

British-born New Zealander George Vernon Hudson first proposed the modern idea of a two-hour daylight saving in 1895.

British Summer Time was suggested in 1907 by William Willett, a keen horse rider and frustrated by the ‘waste’ of daylight in the early mornings during the summer.

Willett’s pamphlet ‘The Waste of Daylight’ campaigned for the clocks to be changed, but he died in 1915 before he could see it come into being as the idea was opposed by many, especially farmers.

Austria and Germany were the first countries to enact ‘Daylight Savings Time’ in 1916, quickly followed the same year by the UK and much of Europe.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It was enforced during the First World War, in a bid to save money during wartime.

The current system has been in place since 1972, proposals to keep the clocks at least one hour ahead of GMT all-year round have been debated frequently in parliament but never implemented.

The lighter evenings are also said to reduce road traffic accidents and crime.

It is argued BST is good for physical and psychological health, particularly in terms of relieving the symptoms of Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).