"Knowledge rests not upon truth alone, but upon error also." ( Carl Jung , 1875 - 1961 )
Today is March 17, 2026, a day that greets us with sunrise at 06:36 and sunset at 18:39, offering a generous 723 minutes of daylight. The preceding night, a relatively brief 718 minutes, has already retreated. We find ourselves on the 76th day of the year, firmly in the grasp of late winter, though the air carries the unmistakable promise of spring. It has already been 86 days since the shortest day at the winter solstice, and we are now just 4 days away from the spring equinox, when day and night will briefly meet as equals before daylight continues its ascent.
Our daylight is steadily growing, having gained a net total of 212 minutes since the last equinox. Today alone, we pocket an extra 6 minutes of sun, a tidy sum achieved through a perfectly balanced schedule adjustment: sunrise arrives 3 minutes earlier and sunset lingers 3 minutes later. It seems the sun, perhaps feeling the peer pressure of the approaching equinox, is making a concerted effort to extend its hours, nudging both ends of the day with equal enthusiasm.
| label | value |
|---|---|
| Date | Mar 17, 2026 |
| Sunrise | 06:36 |
| Sunset | 18:39 |
| Daylight (min) | 723 |
| Daylight gain in minutes since yesterday | 6.0 |
🤖 This text was generated with the assistance of AI. All quantitative statements are derived directly from the dataset listed under Data Source.