By 1808Delaware

There is a moment each year in Delaware County that arrives quietly but changes everything. It is not marked on calendars or announced with fanfare. It happens in the sky. That moment has just passed.

As of this week, daylight in central Ohio has stretched beyond 13 hours, opening the door to a sustained season of long evenings and early sunrises that will carry through mid-August. From now until then, each day will offer at least 13 hours of light, culminating in nearly 15 hours at the height of summer. It is, in every practical sense, the return of the long light.


A Season That Builds Week by Week

Right now, sunrise comes just before 7:00 AM and sunset lands around 8:00 PM. But the pace of change over the next several weeks is what makes this stretch so noticeable. By early May, sunset will push past 8:30 PM. By early June, it will approach 9:00 PM. Around the summer solstice on June 21, daylight will peak at roughly 15 hours, with usable twilight lingering even later.

For residents, that progression rarely feels gradual. It feels like evenings suddenly open up.


Why This Stretch Feels Different

Not all daylight is experienced the same way. What sets this period apart is not just the total number of hours, but how those hours are distributed.

Spring adds light most quickly in the evening. Each passing day brings a later sunset, and that has an outsized effect on daily life. An extra 20 or 30 minutes of evening light feels far more significant than the same amount added to the early morning. By late May, the region settles into a rhythm where daylight extends well into the evening hours, and the boundary between day and night softens. Even after sunset, twilight provides a lingering glow that stretches activity later into the day.


The Plateau of Summer

After the rapid climb of April and May, daylight levels off in late June and early July. The days stop getting longer, but they do not feel shorter. For a time, Delaware County sits at the peak of the year’s light. Sunset holds just after 9:00 PM. The sky remains bright well beyond that. It is the period when summer feels most expansive.


The Turn Toward Fall

The shift back comes quietly. In early August, sunsets begin to pull back in a way that becomes noticeable. By mid-August, total daylight drops below 13 hours again, closing the long-light window that began in early April. The change is subtle at first, but unmistakable. Evenings tighten. The rhythm begins to shift.


A Window Worth Noticing

From now through mid-August, Delaware County will experience roughly 129 consecutive days with at least 13 hours of daylight. That is more than four months of extended light, concentrated in a stretch when people are most inclined to be outside, active, and engaged with their community.

For the next several weeks in particular, the change is visible almost day by day. The light lingers a little longer each evening. The sky holds on a little later. And with it comes one of the most defining seasonal shifts of the year.

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