When living in Stockholm, I came to appreciate the various levels of twilight and darkness, rather than thinking of day and night so strictly. The sun being low on the horizon also scatters light across the sky in ways that are very beautiful and last much longer than sunrise and sunset in Australia where I grew up.
Zanfa|11 months ago
mdpye|11 months ago
I'm in the southern UK, and I'd take our late-May/early-August "it's light while I'm awake and dark while I (should be) asleep" all year round if I could get it.
henrikschroder|11 months ago
We went for dinner in the afternoon, sun was up, it was blazing hot, everything normal so far. We had dinner while the sun set in a nice air-conditioned restaurant, so it was dark when it was time to leave, and I walked out into the tropical night and was so confused why it was still warm and moist outside!
thaumasiotes|11 months ago
On the other hand, reading a book outside in normal daylight will hurt your eyes. The paper reflects too much light.
Kindles solve this problem by being gray; I've never understood why Amazon went on to develop a "Paperwhite" model. Paper is too white!
piva00|11 months ago
I'm originally from São Paulo, Brazil, the Tropic of Capricorn almost cuts through the city itself. Sunrises and sunsets are very quick events, sitting somewhere to watch it would take some 30 minutes, and then darkness.
Even after 10+ years of living in Sweden I still get mesmerised by sunrises and sunsets here, they last for so long and I get to be awed by the changing of colours, shadows, shapes, for hours. It's one of my favourite things to do during summers, just to be out somewhere by a lake with some friends, having food and drinks, and watching the endless twilight.
dietr1ch|11 months ago
In Chile you get somewhat long days and short days too, especially in the south, but instead of trying to be super precise about sunlight, the afternoon and night blend in and sort of crossfade. You end up with "8 de la tarde" (8 in the afternoon), and "6 de la noche" (6 at night) depending on the season.
madcaptenor|11 months ago
7/8/9 de la noche (vs tarde) is used by 60/97/100% of American Spanish speakers vs 1/16/97% of European Spanish speakers. I wonder if the difference is due to Spain's generally late sunsets.
It would be interesting to redo this analysis with a corpus that indicates seasons though.
madcaptenor|11 months ago
TheSpiceIsLife|11 months ago
Where I’m at in Aus it’s day light till 10pm at the summer solstice.
No sun to really speak of at the winter solstice though.
MarceliusK|11 months ago
christopher8827|11 months ago
dkdbejwi383|11 months ago