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British summertime offers an abundance of ways for us to connect with nature and reap the benefits it provides, and it can be ...
British Summer Time (BST) is back, which means that clocks in the United Kingdom will move forward by one hour, before Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is restored in October.
British Summer Time 2025 starts as the clocks go forward one hour at 1am on Sunday 30 March, giving us more daylight in the evenings, but should it be that way all year round?
British Summer Time is here at last: everything you need to know about why the clocks go forward tonight The clocks are going forward tonight, marking the beginning of long-awaited British Summer ...
UK households and businesses are heading into the first clock change of 2025 this weekend. Every spring, the clocks must go forward as we move from Greenwich Mean Time into British Summer Time.
The clocks go forward on Sunday, marking the beginning of British Summer Time (BST). This marks the end of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and will mean longer, lighter evenings from next week.
It comes as clocks will go forward one hour on Sunday to provide more daylight in the evenings during what is known as British Summer Time (BST). They then go back one hour at 2am on the last Sunday ...
This Sunday we will change our clocks to go forward an hour and face around seven months of living in the “wrong time zone” as we enter Daylight Saving Time (or British Summer Time as it is ...
Clocks go forward one hour at 1am on the last Sunday in March to provide more daylight in the evenings during what is known as British Summer Time, with the change taking place this year on March 30.
Clocks went forward by an hour at 01:00 GMT today. It marked the end of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and the start of British Summer Time (BST) or Daylight Saving Time (DST). If you struggle to ...