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How to Use Your Watch as a Compass: 3 EASY Steps to Find North By 555 Gear

بواسطة 555 Gear
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تم نشره في 2018/04/20

How-to use a Watch as a Compass in 3 EASY Steps. More below ↡ Thanks for supporting me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=845171 My Wristwatch playlist: http://tinyurl.com/zjk7np5 Make sure to hit that subscribe button if you're new here! Thanks for watching! Full Description (timestamps below): Find South, Find North! In this video I show an the easy traditional way to determine true North/South using any wristwatch with an analog face. This how to could be handy in a survival situation and certainly is a cool party trick that isn't hard to learn. I also discuss how you can use a watch bezel (diving or compass) to mark your direction and things to be mindful of: such as time of day, daylight savings time, and what hemisphere you're in. Watches shown: Rolex Air King, Seiko Turtle, Seiko Alpinist How-To Steps with Timestamps (* = Key Step) Pre-Step) What kind of watch can you use? 0:38 *1) Determine location of SUN 2:30 1.5) Shadow Trick if needed 2:47 *2) Point HOUR hand towards Sun (how to hold watch) 3:00 *3) BISECT midpoint of arc between hour hand and 12 o'clock indices. If done correctly, congrats, you have determined true SOUTH. 3:35 You are DONE, but keep watching for additional helpful steps: 4) Things to be mindful of: daylight savings and hemisphere 4:57 5) If you are in the Southern hemisphere 5:23 6) IMPORTANT: Time of day correction: Bisect clockwise before noon, counterclockwise after noon 5:48 7) Tips for using a compass bezel 6:35 8) Fact check 7:11 Thumbs up for detailed description and timestamps :)

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تعليقات - 213
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    @voiceofexperience6 years ago What I learned today: The Seiko Alpinist is a beautiful little watch. 146
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    @iamsemjaza3 years ago If you only have a digital watch, you can draw a circle on the ground, put a stick in the middle, use the shadow to pick the sun location (opposite of the shadow) and divide the circle in half there, then divide the circle in half at 90 degrees from that line, then divide those 4 sections into 3rds, giving you 12 hour points. You now have an oriented clock drawn on the ground. mark the hours starting with the original opposite-shadow point hour, then bisect between that hour and "twelve" on your dirt clock. Huzzah! South. ... 62
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    @JustCallMeHornet6 months ago THANK YOU!! This is the information that every other video leaves out. They always tell you to bisect but they never clarify in which direction to bisect. This is important information! ... 2
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    @anthonyd68816 years ago Pretty sure i'm going to forget all this by the time I'm actually lost...
    But great tutorial!
    66
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    @leonardbullhock5 months ago This helped me when I was lost at work one day. Cheers
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    @mosmicke6 years ago This is such a good video in so many ways. It is very refreshing seeing someone actually showing the functions of particular watches in their respective enviorment, but also just being outside apposed to filming on top of a boring desk.
    Nice one sir. Keep 'em coming!
    ...
    17
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    @michaelwillan84642 years ago Daylight savings time: use 1o'clock position instead of 12 on the watch, (northern hemisphere). Before or after noon: simply shortest distance to the 12 or 1o'clock position. 12
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    @williamwallace98264 years ago Good video. I learned this many years ago, and then I forgot it many years ago. I remembered that it could be done but I couldn't remember how. Now I know (again). Thank you. 4
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    @shonkeymoulder69726 years ago Thank you for the additional knowledge. Never knew about bisecting clockwise and counterclockwise before. 17
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    @jcarlo331last month Last time I heard the term “ Bisecting “ was back at Ft Benning during a land navigation course , intro level like Boot camp lol ,, I watched many channels on fellas trying to explain how to get a N point , from a watch bezel ,,nice job sir , I now have that skill set ,, just need to apply it ,, Tomm I will ride my bike 100 miles outside Las Vegas , with nothing , just a camel back , couple spare tires , a hand pump , my multitool and my Breitling Endurance,, plus my light ,,wish me luck coach . ...
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    @zedymike49106 years ago You 're the only guy who differentiates the area to bisect at different times of the day. 5am south is different from 5pm south. Thank you.
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    @josephj73876 years ago A thousand likes for the simple and visual example! Love from Bengaluru India 1
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    @renhoek38513 years ago I always sort of knew you could do this but understanding it now after all these years is really satisfying! thanks so much for a great video. 1
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    @vict90624 years ago You are the only I understand the "HOW TO" clearly. Well explained. Thank you
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    @maddogtroy286 years ago Just gotta say thanks for this video I never knew this was a possability. I'm gonna test it and practice some with a compass beside it. Thanks again really enjoying your videos. 3
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    @elfergos4 years ago Thumbs up, purely for the dapper attire in the face of that rugged looking surrounding.
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    @williamlopez456 years ago I just learned something new, thank you! 2
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    @Alenagracediaz4 years ago Seiko 6309 Turtle! Nice 😎 Thanks for the video, it is really explained well!
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    @attilakovacs58032 years ago I like your outfit showing that even a person unprepared for (or inexperienced in) navigation outdoors can find his way around using his only tool, his watch.
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    @isthi000ify2 years ago Thanks so much man just come across your channel!! Such beautiful watches wow!
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    @silvaanosvs8783last year "If you don't know what hemisphere you're in, I'm very sorry." Fantastic.
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    @jayjay99323 years ago Thank you for the idea, I'll download the app.
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    @05generic6 years ago Actually, if you have paper and pencil or a nice piece of dirt and a stick to work with, you can use a digital watch. Simply transfer the digital readout to a partial analog clock face that you draw. But just have an analog watch. They're much classier. ... 21
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    @1dd4342 years ago Great video, many thanks, learning here.
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    @Naturecraft6454 years ago Finally, someone teaches this correctly. Most people say you always bisect in one direction (clockwise or counterclockwise) which is not the case!
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    @Martin_Hunac6 years ago Hi 555, i would be very happy if you would continue making watch videos :-) Hi from Czech Republic
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    @petermason15736 years ago Fascinating video! Can I ask where you got the canvas holder for the watches? () 1
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    @thederp76906 years ago My principle is a cool guy, and so are you, I’m glad some other people get a good principle too, there are too many bad ones out there 1
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    @carllange39505 years ago If you have a 24 hour hand (like on a GMT watch) and it is showing your local time, it becomes easier. In the northern hemisphere, point the regular (12 hour) hour hand at the sun. The 24 hour hand will point north. In the Southern Hemisphere, point the 12 o’clock marker at the sun, the 24 hour hand will point south. The mathematics ends up being equivalent. The 24 hour dial is doing the bisection. If you are near the equator, just poke a stick in the ground and wait to see which way the sun is moving. It moves from East to West in the sky. ... 4
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    @blazel4923 years ago If you get lost enough, you eventually get a feel for direction even without the watch. 😊
    But I love the Alpinist.
    2
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    @Malc6644 years ago Got it at the end. You kept going off track or I did but get it, thanks. I'm in the land down under so maybe north means north on the watch. I'll check it out with my compass. Oh hang on my watch is on order , I don't have one. 😁 Yet. ...
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    @gerdamelle4 years ago Wonder if we could use the position of the moon to determine direction with the same principle at night? Thanks anyone for your advice! 1
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    @cafn8ed746 years ago This seems really useful. Perhaps I'm a bit dense, but I'm still a little unclear on the AM/PM difference. You mentioned that it was in your video. Was that AM or PM?
    Also, I once heard about a trick for finding the sun when it's very overcast. Might have been on another YouTube channel. A thin object might not cast a shadow at all, but something wide and flat probably will. Hold the flat object (paper plate, knife blade, trapper keeper etc.) near a flat surface and turn it until the shadow disappears, and you know the sun is inline with the flat object.
    ...
    1
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    @Jacobsen57004 years ago Never seen Charlie Day so calm and collected before.. 4
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    @vidsscreen4 years ago Hi I would like to know the name of the app.on your phone you used for compass accuracy . Where did you get it . For android !
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    @jamesundau87904 years ago Nice survival skill using the watch. I like your video. How to use if in equator?
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    @Kalsn4 years ago what if the hour arrow points to 12. Is it also pointing south? And what about during the night, is the moon similarly helpful?
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    @mendozaconsultation5 years ago @ the video time or so, what your saying on how to measure the time contradicts what's written in step 6. Can you clarify.
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    @ChrisKimDMD10 months ago I hope to remember clockwise/counterclockwise bisection when I'm lost in woods with wolf cry in the background. 😁
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    @madcat10074 years ago You can use a digital watch as well. Either draw or imagine an analogue face on your watch. Easy peasy!! 3
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    @Fearless-14 years ago To use a digital watch as a compass, just visualize the hour hand on the watch face then point it at the sun. 7
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    @mendozaconsultation5 years ago Does the position of the sun during the day, change anything also, how do you now set your compass if you have one incase the sun goes down or it rains ?
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    @ChapeauRouge9215 years ago If I remember correctly, here in the southern hemisphere you take a match, place it on 12 and turn until the shadow forms a line from 12 to 6 (A lot more accurate than just pointing it to the sun) and then you bisect between the hour hand and the shadow line and you have true north. ...
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    @k.r.67092 years ago How do you use that in the deep woods or desert?
    Great you know south and north but what happens if you don't know where the town is or what direction you came from?
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    @user-gz5jp1tc1j7 months ago I've noticed that this and other similar videos are omitting something important. If it's after 6pm and the sun is still out, North and South along the bisect line become reversed. If it's 8:00pm and the sun is out (let's say setting), and you point the hour hand at the sun and bisect against "12" (like normal), what is South in the am is now North in the pm. ...
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    @rager196910 months ago Ok, so I know where South is and if that's the direction I want to walk, I guess I try to find a landmark in that direction and walk towards it. East and West would be a bit harder to eyeball, but I guess it's doable. How do you determine a landmark behind you (i.e., North)? ...
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    @TheUsaid114 years ago So you mean to say is the acute angle between hour hand and 12 o close mark is facing south and the obtuse angle bisector will face north ?? What happend at 12.30 at noon ?? Gow do we say which one is south or north ?
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    @Immortal__6 years ago which camera & lens did you use to record this?
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    @PJ8184 years ago During daylight savings time bisect the angle between the hour hand and 1:00 pm. During daylight savings time we spring forward; so when the Sun was roughly due south at noon during standard time, it’s now roughly due south at 1:00 pm during daylight savings time. I was an Assistant Scoutmaster and taught this trick, and I work at an astronomy museum.
    For any smart-ass comments about doing this trick at night, you don’t need a watch at night to find north. If you look for the Big Dipper you’ve got the handle and the bowl. If you take the two stars of the bowl farthest from the handle and draw a straight line, that line, from the “open end” of the bowl, points at the North Star, so you know where the north is. The Big Dipper is easy to see with city lights or even a Full Moon; and while the North Star isn’t a very bright star, it is still bright enough to be seen during a Full Moon.
    In the Southern Hemisphere at night there isn’t a “South Star”, but the constellation of the Southern Cross (Crux, the constellation on the flags of Australia and New Zealand) can be used to find south. The longest part of the long vertical beam of the cross points to the South Celestial Pole in the sky, and while there isn’t a South Star like a North Star, there’s a noticeably blank patch of sky with no significant stars at all. That’s south.
    ...
    3
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    @commercialbreak8290last year So if I dont have a watch but I do have a compass I can work out the time by doing an inverse bisection.
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    @diegoordonez59844 months ago If it's 12pm how do you calculate or bisect?
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    @user-ik5mn8qv5zlast year Is it possible to use GMT hand to navigate? (Must be possible)
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    @mendozaconsultation5 years ago Acording to another video i saw, "If it's daylight savings time,just set your watch one hr back" is this correct. Surpose to be an old boy scout trick ?
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    @bernardtan14 years ago I'm in the Southern Hemisphere, so I use the 12 o'clock marker to point at the SUN then bisect COUNTER CLOCKWISE before noon then opposite after noontime.
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    @franciscomartinezzea85312 years ago Solar time is from 6am solar to 6pm solar. These hours don't have sixty minutes. So we really have to know sun rise and sunset times so as to take our watch to solar time and then we bisect the angle between hour hand and twelve. I believe that if we are in the southern hemisphere we are to consider that the bisected angle is pointing north instead of south? ...
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    @mdrsmeltracy5 years ago Another proof that the earth is a globe, not flat! Thanks!
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    @MrHappyman1772 years ago What model is that seko watch with the green face
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    @agrimsingh11last year can i use it if my smartwatch has a analog watchface
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    @General44743 years ago Thanks for the info. Here's a way I figured out how to do this without a watch. You touch your middle finger and your thumb together to form a circle on your right hand. Pretend that the fingernail on your middle finger is the top of the watch 12 noon. now place that circle on your left wrist with the middle finger where normally the 12 noon would be a watch on your wrist. So no you'll see on your middle finger that there's nuckle 1 nuckle 2 and the it joins your hand which is anothe indent in the finger which represents #3. So pretend that's circle is your wrist watch. And nuckle 1 is 1pm, n 2 is 2pm 3 is 3pm. Now Look up at the sun. Approximate where it is in the sky. Kind of approximate what time of day it is. So you woke up in the morning, then after some time you're thinking it's later in the day, maybe 3pm. So you do the same thing, you rotate that 3'rd intend on your sort of fake watch toward the sun. Then inbetween that and your middle finger fingernail is South. It only gives you an approximation. But it's better than nothing and you don't need a watch. ... 1
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    @swampThaang4 years ago So putting it all together if I understand...
    1. Rotate your watch until the hour hand points in the exact opposite direction as your shadow.
    2. Bisect the acute angle between 12 and the hour to find south.
    3. If you are in the Southern Hemisphere, use 12 instead of the hour hand to start step 1.
    4. During DST (generally applies Mar through Oct for North America, Europe and South Australia) use hour hand -1 (not hour hand) as applicable.
    ...
    13
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    @raymondbaring84702 years ago 555 gear at currently 55.5k subscriber, cool!
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    @culichi07763 years ago HAHAHA😆😆😆
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    @user-wd7go9qo8glast month Dude, it's just that if you face towards the sun, your left arm will be North, right arm will be South and behind you is West. (And just reverse it if it's evening, if it's eve and you're using a watch even then you will have to reverse the direction of where you're placing the "middle" or north direction of the watch.)
    WHY IS THIS SO HYPEDDDD
    ...
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    @Sawboolast year Could you just determine where your hour hand would be on a digital watch and go from there?
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    @budchestnut93034 years ago What do yu do if you are on or near the equator?
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    @christopherdixon514111 months ago For DST use 1 o clock instead of 12 o clock marker
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    @Claus-L.Mueller6 years ago I remember I learned this method when I was in the army. 😉
    Another method is to look for a single standing tree. On its north side you are going to find more moss because moss likes to grow on wet places in the shade. And the north side never sees the sun... ...
    29
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    @bernardtan14 years ago We still need a real compass during the night if we are traveling in darkness ? No sun during evening... is the moon the substitute ?
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    @edmund89545 years ago does it only work with automatic watches?
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    @thierrygillard68963 weeks ago I presume this requires that the watch indicates the local time (no DST or unified time across China).
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    @zash0084 years ago Lets see you perform that task with a Meistersinger Salthora Meta X SAMX908 analog watch.😎🕛🧭⌚🕚😁
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    @coffeepot31232 years ago Would'it be more accurate to use a stick to see the shadow,for mentioned accuracy?, (instead of eyeballing it/destroying your eyes by looking towards the sun?)
    It's always best to assume the worst that you (for some odd reason) don't carry sunglasses out in the wild.
    ...
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    @nunyabusiness90563 years ago HELP I'm lost in the rocky mountains in north america. I have a watch and data on my phone but I don't know what hemisphere I'm in. Send a cartographer please!
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    @echochambers84185 years ago I would think the sound of those cars would lead you to safety,but that’s just me. 22
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    @salty_terminal_civilian53744 years ago This once saved my life in Afghanistan with my Seiko SKX..... Got me back to the FOB after an accident on a patrol... Not even joking. I relied on my SKX everyday in that shit hole, and I wear it everyday now, don't know if I can ever get rid of it. Also.... The Alpinist makes me want to go to Everest... ... 1
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    @DelusionalJ6 years ago Sorry, I'm not very certain but if you're in the Southern hemisphere, wouldn't the bisection point North? Thank you in advance
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    @calsurflance55982 years ago You forgot to mention you need really good lume for this to work at night!
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    @M.chinns5 months ago Here is my normal watch a rolex and on that note will just use my human survival homeing beacon wait till nigjt time and walk north south east or west useing the north star as a point of reference
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    @starlord75487 months ago What happens when it's 12 o'clock or the sun is directly up above or at the equator?
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    @georgeholmes14903 years ago What's the solution when sun isn't around for months as in The Artic circle or deep inside the Artic circle..
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    @buyaport2 years ago To determine true north, you only need a bit of imagination and a method to determine the real time at where you are. Imagine a clock face with numbers from 1 to 24 (easier if you double the numbers on a real watch). Then you have to determine the real time, i.e. deduct 1 hour for daylight saving time and adjust the "official" time for the sun time at your place. the official time can be way off (e.g. in Western Spain as much as 1 1/2 hours, so when you are in the summer in Santiago de Compostela and your timepiece shows hrs, the real sun time is hrs.). Find that time on your imaginary or real watch face and point it to the sun. 24 points then to north/12 to south because at midnight the sun is in the north (under horizon), and at noon it is in the south. Easy as that! ...
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    @nahidayesmin96092 years ago Dinka do you know watch the hour hand on a watch you know what is the minute Hen minute 10 same thing us to 12 while we’re in right or you know that
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    @incargeek2 years ago Moss growing on tree trunks is generally on the northern side…
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    @seanfaherty2 years ago This is the reason I didn't have a digital watch in the 90s.
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    @zash0084 years ago Or you can just keep walking while keeping the sun off the front tip of your right shoulder at all times which essentially has you travelling generally south while Joe which is miles behind you, still fooling with his watches. ... 1
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    @sirgigachad18944 years ago I'll stick with a normal compass but I still love watches