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This is a general observation, but it seems to me that activity on this site slows down to a crawl, or even halts, around lunchtime every Sunday in the USA.
P.S. It is 9pm in England, making it between midday and 2pm in America, and browsing in "posts" shows nothing new, nor are there any fresh comments on my blatherings.

#USA
Petter 9 Aug 11
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Enjoy being online again!

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7 comments

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1

There are lulls and increased activity at varying times, I, too, have noticed but not really paid much attention to when or to why.

1

There are something like eight time zones in the United States. I live in the Eastern Standard Time (EST) time zone, which seasonally adjusts to daylight savings time in the winter (get up an hour earlier). When I lived in California, I was in the Pacific Standard Time zone, four hours away from where I currently live. I've also lived in the Central Standard Time zone when I was in Texas. As I type this, it's 5:30 p.m. (EST) in South Carolina, 9:30 p.m. in London, 1:30 p.m. in Los Angeles and so they don't feel left out, 8:26 on a Monday in Sydney.

Whoa! The US is a big country.

When Europeans look at the map, they shrug and say "Hey, it's only four inches across." They think they can take the cross town bus from New York City to Los Angels. With dam few stops, it's a week long bus ride. Passengers smell like the bus when they cross the US by bus.

You might want to rent a car should you fly into Greenville/Spartenburg International (GSP) when you come visit me. I don't live anywhere near GSP but that's the closest international airport.

Since I grew up and spent most of my life in East Africa, I understand distances and map scales rather well.
There's a lovely chart showing Europe, China, Russia and the USA, among other countries, all fitted into Africa!

1

I find local activity slow on this site in general! Seems like people sign up. Visit a few times and then rarely come back... So despite the large "member" numbers there really is only a small group of U.S. regulars that populate the majority of post's here.... Was hoping for more of a large diverse webspace, but ended up going back to FB groups for the diversity and larger pool of people to interact with... Just my 2 cents.... 😊

>So despite the large "member" numbers there really is only a small group of U.S. regulars that populate the majority of post's here.

Like other social media organizations, nobody deletes members who die or visit this site and decide never to come back. Some people join up without knowing what an agnostic is and run away like frightened bunnies.

2

Because we're busy feeding our faces. We didn't get to be one of the fattest nations on earth by skipping meals to post online.

1

It's been slow all this weekend, as far as I'm concerned. I guess everybody's doing summer stuff, or on vacation.

4

That's just because everyone in the US decides to block you right around the same
time, and then changes their mind a little later.

😉

2

Your time zone reckoning is off. It is 4:30 pm on the US East Coast at the moment, and 1:30 pm on the West.

Of course, let's not count what time it is is Hawaii. BTW:

3:38 PM
Central Daylight Time
Chicago (GMT-5)
2:38 PM
Mountain Daylight Time
Denver (GMT-6)
1:38 PM
Mountain Standard Time
Phoenix (GMT-7)
1:38 PM
Pacific Daylight Time
Los Angeles (GMT-7)
12:38 PM
Alaska Daylight Time
Anchorage (GMT-8)
10:38 AM
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time
Honolulu (GMT-10)

I get confused by summer and winter time, and to make things worse I usually live in Spain.

@Petter Want to get confused, try accounting for India which is a half hour from all the time zones.

That being said, I have a "world clock" app on my dumb phone which will keeps track of what time it is in different parts of the world. Without that, find out how many hours they're off from the Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and do the math. You're in GMT+2.

@WonderWartHog99 The Canary islands are also at a half hour offset. Spain minus 30 minutes.

@Petter I like to watch travel shows, which frequently lists things that might shock visitors. One of the ten things that was listed for the US that shocks visitors is generally the public transportation system isn't good. Visitors should rent a car.

The major exception that shocked me was NYC, where it's best to forget the car and take the public transportation system. Believe it or shove it, there are three vehicles in NYC for every parking space. Back in 1998, while the earth was still cooling, I was shocked to see NYC parking garages advertising $430 a month for a parking space.

Thanks for updating me about the 30 minute Spanish time lag. I never entered anything in my world time app for Spain.

@WonderWartHog99 I toured western USA by coach (Greyhound) on my first visit.
For my second visit, I hired a car and meandered at will. The two between them introduced me to a swathe of the NORMAL folk who inhabit the land, not just the ones involved in the tourist industry.

@WonderWartHog99 I once wrote an article that pointed out a simple fact. For every car in a town you need 2 parking places. One for where it "lives" and another for where it intends to visit. NYC therefore has only one sixth of its optimum number of spaces.

@Petter It is only the sprawling megalopolis where one can not begin to guess where the city limit begins and ends that your rule holds true. If they have grid lock, you could have problems parking the car next to where you want to go: i.e. downtown Atlanta, Georgia. In NYC the grid lock never ends.

In the Great White North of the US you may have to alternate which side of the street you park so the snow plows can get through. There's a Lena and Ollie joke about a couple who abandoned hope on keep track of it and parked in the home's garage instead.

I've had the half day experience just trying to going from the south side of Atlanta to the north side. I refer to Atlanta traffic as anus gripping adventure. Pedestrians only zones are extremely rare.

One of the things they mentioned that shock visitors to the US is the advertised price and the price you pay is a guide post. It never includes taxes or a tip. A 15% tip is expected even with the worst service. Here in Seneca the sales tax is seven percent. Sales tax varies where you are and what you're buying.

European teens stagger backward in despair when they discover that all over the US, they can't buy alcoholic drinks. The drinking age starts at 21.

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