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September 21, 2011

Summer ends, and the alarm rings in the dark

FROM TODAY'S PRINT EDITIONS:Alarm clock

As we get nearer to the autumnal equinox on Friday, our family is really starting to notice how much darker it is when the alarm goes off in the morning.

By the end of next week, the sun won’t rise for Baltimore until 7 a.m. EDT, almost an hour and a quarter later than at the solstice in June. And sunset comes 90 minutes earlier, around 7 p.m.

The daylight now grows shorter by about three minutes a day; we’ve already lost nearly two hours and 45 minutes since June.

(SUN PHOTO: Barbara Haddock Taylor, 1994)

Posted by Frank Roylance at 12:06 AM | | Comments (2)
Categories: From the Sun's print edition, Sky Notes
        

Comments

i just moved to a house at the bottom of a valley and i have really noticed how late it is when the sun reaches my house.

LOVE THE CLOCK!

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About Frank Roylance
This site is the Maryland Weather archive. The current Maryland Weather blog can be found here.
Frank Roylance is a reporter for The Baltimore Sun. He came to Baltimore from New Bedford, Mass. in 1980 to join the old Evening Sun. He moved to the morning Sun when the papers merged in 1992, and has spent most of his time since covering science, including astronomy and the weather. One of The Baltimore Sun's first online Web logs, the Weather Blog debuted in October 2004. In June 2006 Frank also began writing comments on local weather and stargazing for The Baltimore Sun's print Weather Page. Frank also answers readers’ weather queries for the newspaper and the blog. Frank Roylance retired in October 2011. Maryland Weather is now being updated by members of The Baltimore Sun staff
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