At 5:51 a.m. Eastern Time (09:51 UTC) on Sunday, fall begins in the Northern Hemisphere and spring begins in the Southern Hemisphere. On Sunday, there are twelve hours of daylight and twelve hours of darkness at all points on the earth’s surface.
It always pours the day after Equinox even if there’s a dry spell on. Never fails, 2 times a year, every year. I am living in Singapore, very close to the equator. Anyone out there experience the same thing?
September 23, 2007 at 11:52 pm
(3) Brad says:
I live in Arizona–so the less sunlight we get in the summer time—the better—-now that we are into the fall season—which for us, doesn’t actually begin until the end of October—we have very long summers—but the winters are very nice–average high around 70—-
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That’s awesome!
It always pours the day after Equinox even if there’s a dry spell on. Never fails, 2 times a year, every year. I am living in Singapore, very close to the equator. Anyone out there experience the same thing?
I live in Arizona–so the less sunlight we get in the summer time—the better—-now that we are into the fall season—which for us, doesn’t actually begin until the end of October—we have very long summers—but the winters are very nice–average high around 70—-