How to Measure Remaining Daylight with Your Hand

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Jul 032025
 

How to Measure Remaining Daylight with Your Hand

You can estimate the amount of remaining daylight by using your hand and the horizon. This is a popular outdoorsman trick known as the “hand method” or “finger rule.” Here’s how to do it:


Step-by-Step: How to Measure Remaining Daylight with Your Hand

  1. Face the Sun: Stand facing the setting sun, making sure you have a clear view of the horizon.
  2. Extend Your Arm: Stretch your arm out fully in front of you, palm facing you, fingers horizontal to the ground.
  3. Stack Your Fingers:
    • Place your bottom pinky finger on the horizon line.
    • Stack your fingers one over the other (palm-side toward you) toward the bottom edge of the sun.
    • Count how many fingers fit between the horizon and the sun.
  4. Estimate Time:
    • Each finger width (from pinky to index) represents roughly 15 minutes of remaining daylight.
    • A full hand (4 fingers) is about 1 hour.
    • If you can fit 2 hands (8 fingers), that’s about 2 hours of light left.

Notes & Tips:

  • This method works best closer to the equator and near sunset, when the sun’s angle is more horizontal.
  • It’s an approximation, but surprisingly accurate for planning hikes or travel before dark.
  • The trick works because the sun moves about 15 degrees per hour, and each finger equals around 1 degree at arm’s length.

Example:

You see the sun is 1½ hand-widths (6 fingers) above the horizon. That means you have approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes of daylight left.

The Sun

 Featured, Political, View Point  Comments Off on The Sun
Jul 072024
 

Everything in Nature seeks the Sun. Flowers turn to face it. Plants expand to catch it. Animals come out and graze in it. Water reflects to capture it. Fruits ripen to code it. Humans slather toxins on their skin to block it.



Everything in Nature seeks the Sun.

Flowers turn to face it.
Plants expand to catch it.
Animals come out and graze in it.
Water reflects to capture it.
Fruits ripen to code it.
Humans slather toxins on their skin to block it.