because the day is longer now
When you turn the clocks back, you are adjusting them to reflect a different time zone or to correct for daylight saving time ending. This practice typically occurs in the fall to "fall back" one hour.
they turn the clocks back 1 hour. remember spring ahead and fall back?
You turn the clocks back because the days get longer.
In Daylight Saving Time, you turn your clocks forward in the spring and backward in the fall.
When the clocks get turned back depends on where you are. In the United States, most locations turn their clocks back on the first Sunday in November. In the European Union, most locations turn their clocks back on the last Sunday in October.
In the fall of 2010, the clocks were turned back on November 7th. This is part of the daylight saving time practice where clocks are set back one hour to mark the end of daylight saving time for the year.
The American law by which we turn our clock forward in the spring and back in the fall is known as the Uniform Time Act of 1966.
In 2009 the UK will change their clocks one hour ahead at 1am on the last Sunday in March, March 29th. They will move their clocks back an hour at 1am on the last Sunday in October, October 25th.
Russia
2 AM on Sunday Morning.
You turn the clock forward in the spring for daylight saving time, usually on the second Sunday in March. You turn the clock back in the fall for standard time, usually on the first Sunday in November.