wingspan33 wrote:I, . . . . think, . . . . I'm, . . . . getting, . . . . dizzy.
I keep it straight in my mind when I picture the sun directly overhead (but slightly to the south) as noon and indicating south.
To the right of the sun is west. The time zone to the west will not have the sun directly over head for one more hour so they have 11:00am now while I’m having noon. I adjust from that premise.
One thing I didn’t figure out until I was in twelfth grade was that the moon moves around the Earth in the opposite direction that it appears to move.
It appears to rise in the east, like the sun, and the moon appears to set in the west like the sun.
And unless I had a misprint in my encyclopedia collection the moon travels around the Earth from west to east. We are spinning faster than the moon can keep up so it is losing the race in the same direction. This makes it appear to be moving east to west. But it is not. It is moving west to east.
(Help! I'm drifting off topic --- Save me! --- Or join me.)