Wednesday, March 12, 2008

No really, what time is it?

(Please scroll down for my Wordless Wednesday post)

Canada Last December, when it was midnight here in Waterloo, it was 2 AM in Argentina.
Then after Dec/30, when it was midnight here, it was 3AM in Argentina.
A few days later, some areas of Argentina went one hour back. So it was 2 AM in some areas, and 3 AM in others.
After last weekend, when it's midnight here, it's either 1 AM or 2 AM in Argentina.
After this Sunday, when it's midnight here, it will be 1 AM in Argentina (will it?).

This is a complete mess.

When I read the newspapers and see what some politicians say; or when I read that people say things like "forcing us to wear seat belts is unconstitutional" when all records have been broken for deaths in car accidents lately, that's when I realize that Argentina seems to be in its own time zone; sometimes it looks like we're 50 years behind... :-(


Argentina En Diciembre pasado, cuando era medianoche en Waterloo, eran las 2 AM en Argentina.
Luego del 30 de Diciembre, cuando era medianoche aquí, eran las 3 AM en Argentina.
Pocos días después, algunas regiones de Argentina volvieron una hora para atrás. Así que eran las 2 AM en algunos lugares, y las 3 AM en otros.
Desde el fin de semana pasado, cuando es medianoche aquí, es o bien la 1 AM o las 2 AM en Argentina.
Luego de este domingo que viene, cuando sea medianoche aquí, será la 1 AM en toda Argentina (será así?).

Esto es un completo desastre.

Cuando leo en los diarios las cosas que algunos políticos aún dicen; o cuando leo que algunos dicen cosas como "hacernos usar el cinturón de seguridad es anticonstitucional", cuando se han roto todos los récords de muertes por accidentes de tránsito últimamente, ahí me doy cuenta que Argentina parecería estar en su propia zona del tiempo; a veces siento que estamos 50 años atrás... :-(

10 comments:

  1. I know what you mean! I LOVE Argentina, I miss it a lot. I spent 5 months there traveling there with my partner. I fell in love with the place, BUT road rules, huh? We would see these guys burning around on motorcycles with helmets on their ELBOWS. Apparently the law says you just need a helmet, it doesn't say where.

    ?????

    I had a neon green helmet at the time, it crowned me dork princess, but better to be a dork princess with a helmet on my head. :-P

    ReplyDelete
  2. We have the same problem with British time. There is a period of a few weeks a year where instead of the five hour difference, it is a four hour difference but it still takes us six hours to get to London.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Lamento decirte, QUE SE GENERALIZA en el continente SUR!

    A nuestro presidente se le ocurrió cambiar nuestro huso horario EN MEDIA HORA! Es una hora para toda la nación, pero es el único Huso Horario que se diferencia del resto en 30 minutos. Por ejemplo: Con Colombia siempres fue una hora de diferencia. Ahora es media hora. Los cálculos de cambio horario se dificultan un POQUITO nada más

    (Yo como que enlode la explicación, pero ya esta así, jajajajja)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Asi es, este domingo retrasaremos nuestros relojes en 1 hora....
    Recuperaremos la hora de sueño que nos sacaron en diciembre... Iuju!
    Como vos, considero que en Argentina tenemos diferencia en años y no en horas... y cada vez mas para atras.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well, you made it sound a bit odd.
    It's not that bad, almost every country has a summer/winter time change and we have started to apply it again after many years in order to try to reduce energy consumption, given our energetic crisis.
    You have summer/winter time as well in Canada, so that's why you had so many changes.
    :)

    ReplyDelete
  6. ps: I did say "try", because I don't really know how much energy we can save by changing the time. Still, I do support the effort.
    :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Argentina is a country who makes things in the opposite way.
    No matter what, always the opposite.
    The measure, far away to reduce energy consumption, increased it...
    Ok... was not the measure itself...
    but in spite of the measure consumption increased in the last months.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Paola, I do not question the fact that Argentina has finally gone into daylight savings time. The problem is that:

    * They moved to time zone -3, when in reality they should have gone back to -5 (which is the right time zone for Argentina)
    * They did it on December 30th, when the rest of the world does it in October
    * They did it with a couple days of notice, so people had a lot of problems getting used to it.
    * They didn't take into consideration that the western provinces (Cuyo) should be on a different time zone no matter what; of course, a few days into this time change, some provinces went back.
    * Finally, they're going back to (what they think is) the 'right' time zone this weekend, a week after most other countries in the world did...

    I will still give them one year of grace and wait to see if they do it properly in 2008/2009. But this wasn't serious.

    Of course, 'they' and 'them' identifies ARG's government.

    ReplyDelete
  9. That's the question...
    Always one step behind.
    San Luis was the one and only province who keep the -3 time zone, the rest of the country was -2.
    This sunday morning we'll wake up -3 again.
    Today i was talking with my pupils about this topic and post, comparing with the usual way we have to make things in different way.
    Ah... sorry about my lousy english.

    ReplyDelete
  10. LOL
    What I meant was that your post sounded as if it was a terrible inconvenience to know which time it is because of how many times we/you have changed the time.
    To me it was only natural.
    :)
    As for the rest of the facts you mention, I totally agree. In fact, I was just discussing the same with a colleague from Peru last thursday.

    ReplyDelete

Please leave a message after the beep

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Buy at KW Empanadas!

Share |