I have my routines set to turn a light on in my house if I come home, however I don't need this to happen at 1pm in the afternoon. I can't find a way to turn the light on only if it is dark out when I arrive at home

Make jump time anytime with a Sky Zone Membership. Play and Re-Play Every Day! Become a Sky Zone Member and get exclusive discounts, swag and access to Member-only events.Compare our Membership packages and sign up today.


Download Only For One Night


Download 🔥 https://urlin.us/2y3BVj 🔥



I don't want any sound from my phone during my waking hours, definitely not during meetings, and meals, etc. so I have my ringer in silent mode (the little switch on the side), and set my Sound setting to no vibration. I have an Apple watch, so I get notifications on my watch via vibration when I get calls during the day. Minimal disturbance. The problem is at night when I do not wear my watch. I like my phone or watch to make some noise in case any of my contacts in my Favorites list calls, or emergency calls from my family members (who are in my Favorites list). How can I do that?

If I do that, I will miss the calls from people not in my favorites during the day. Right now, I get vibrate notifications on my watch from people in or not in my favorites. Your solution works for me at night, but I have to remember setting it every night before I go to sleep!

Just ordered 2 arlo cameras from amazon. Just wondering if it is possible to set them so they only are active at night. Live on a farm and have lots of farm equipment in and out and don't want that triggering them all the time. We've had problems with prowlers at night and would like to only have cameras on then.

Yes. Set up a schedule eg ARMED from 6pm-midnight and midnight-6am each day (or whatever you want) and disarmed during the day. Then set the system into schedule mode and it will run the way you set it

Come join us under the stars for an adults only 2 hour private evening tour of our mountainside Zoo. We will enjoy a beverage to start off the night, then stroll under the stars to see what our animals do at night, we will even get an opportunity to meet one of our Loft animal ambassadors! This program is for adults only, 21+. Registration is required.

Limited tickets are available online only* for this event and will be emailed directly to you shortly after you complete your purchase. Tickets can be printed out or scanned directly from your mobile device.

I was curious if anyone had a configuration example of an automation when the lights (in the kitchen) for example should turn on only when it is either a) dark in the room based on lumens or b) after 5pm but before 8am.

I remember vividly having to run away from creepers when exploring long miles, but not anymore. They indeed spawn in huge numbers, but ONLY at night. And you wanna know the weird part? If I go to bed before the sky going totally dark, when I wake up I can't find any trace of dead mobs. Things like arrows, bones and such are nowhere to be found unless I literally go exploring at night. Is this normal? Is it part of some sort of update?r

Hostile mobs only spawn at night, or in light levels of 7 or less. So yes, it's normal not to see them outside in the daytime, and sleeping skips the night and nighttime mob spawning (that's pretty much the point of sleeping). Try looking underground in dark caves to see if you find mobs there. Or just build a large, dark room and mobs should spawn inside any time of the day or night.

ASAP! We highly recommend purchasing tickets as far in advance as you can, as we anticipate selling out most nights of Zoo Lights. Tickets are available ONLINE ONLY, and will not be available at the gate.

In addition, El Pomar Village Hall is home to fishing cats and Asian small-clawed otters, both of which are busy hunting and playing at night. And of course, you can always make your Zoo Lights experience unforgettable by adding one of our Giraffe Feedings to your night!

You can also set min stay 3 or more days during the season... and later, when it fills up, you can set it lower for remaining gaps. That way you will avoid to much one nighters in a row. Cleaning fee also keep them away.

If you are on-site and can do the cleaning I highly recommend one-night stays, at least for the 'off-season' (if you are in an area with 'off' and 'peak' or 'high' seasons, like I am). We have remained nearly 100% occupied with mainly Airbnb guests since opening, including during the off-season, by accepting one night stays. I DO charge a cleaning fee, but my prices are lower in the off-season, so it all balances out. I have a hot tub and that alone requires time to clean and the chemicals required to keep it in good condition are not cheap. Plus caring for linens and all of that. Not one person has ever complained about the cleaning fee. So I agree with Sandra and Marzensa. We opened last May and accepted one night stays from the beginning and 10 months later we have over 75 five star reviews and continue to be nearly 100% occupied (we do take days off here and there). During the high season I have a two night minimum but I will lower that to one if we still have a few days left here and there unbooked once high season starts (we are more than 50% booked for the high season already). Hope that helps!

Have 6 one nighters in March. Usually only a few here and there, but fills all the gaps in the calendar. The worst is when I have a three night gap, someone books a one nighter in the middle and the remaining two have to be one nighters too. One memorable month over half the bookings were one nighters. Phew!

I don't charge a cleaning fee. In fact, my one night gaps are LOWER in price, as I really want people to book them instead of picking a date which breaks up a week. I drop the price even more closer to the date. I would rather have someone in the house for a lower price than nobody at all. And one nighters often (not always) go out for dinner, no cooking. But sometimes they want to play with EVERYTHING because they have such short time.

One night stays depend on the location of the host, @Pete69. For me (city center location, close to the station at the same time) such guests consist some 10% of my guests. The rule with one-night stays is to charge a cleaning fee. Solves all dilemas.

If it's a normal tritium night sight, it'll work well in the dark and in low light. In reality, total dark is pretty unusual, and everything else is sort of in between. The biggest advantage night sights offer happens when it's dark, but not so dark that you can't identify the target. You can see the target reasonably well, you can see the gun, but you can't really see the sights clearly....that's the bread and butter of night sights.

If it's totally dark you're probably going to need a light of some sort to ID the target, so night sights lose some, but not all, of their utility. When it's totally dark and you have a light on the target, the sights are still in the dark; you can see them on the illuminated target but the glowing inserts make is much, much easier to get a decent sight picture.

Some folks prefer their guns set up with just a front night sight. It makes it impossible to mix up which dot goes where, but it does give up some precision. I think the theory there is that they're not planning on long-range engagements in low light. I had Dave Lauck at D&L do a custom night sight install on my wife's Smith 640, and he used two smaller, whitish inserts on the rear sight and a larger, green insert on the front...no way to confuse those.

Some folks are convinced night sights don't offer anything at all since they'll need a light to ID the target. 15 minutes on an indoor range where I can dim the lights and I can disprove that one easily. R,

ALL night sights are only good for low-light scenarios, NOT full-on darkness, whether front only or both front-and-rear... if you're talking self-defense, if you can't see your living/breathing target clearly, you shouldn't be shooting at it, period.

This is a very subjective thing, and opinions will vary, but IMO tritium/night sights are completely optional and I've since transitioned to not even bothering with tritium at all and now run all-black irons on all my pistols.

Unless you're in certain low-light situations regularly (like say as a sentry on an evening shift at a security check-point or something) tritium/night-sights only really provide an advantage at dawn and dusk, the other 22+ hours of the day they might as well not exist and in some cases mean you're not carrying the best sights for the lion's share of your time... If talking about possibly using a firearm on something that's living/breathing, then if it's really dark, you need a light 'cause you need to see your target and if you can't see your firearm clearly... well, you get it.

As far as match shooting is concerned, of course night-sights can be put to good use and are a help when shooting low-light/dark stages as in we're shooting for a score (-0 is better than -3...), but in "real life" their actual advantage is very debatable. In my case I only encounter low-light matches once or twice a year so it's not a huge deal to me, if my last name was Sevigny or something and I really had a good chance of going home with some money, then I'd probably mount up a set for the limited matches that I had to.

I seriously doubt that only having tritium up front would handicap one from being able to make an SD shot that would indeed be made with front-and-rear tritium in place, moreover, IMHO lots of practice and good index is worth way more than any tacticool night-sight set anyway and a good friend of mine who's an Optometrist has told me that bright tritium on rear sights would actually only likely make things more confusing to your eyes/brain and make shooting harder in low-light. 2351a5e196

carnivores dinosaur hunter reborn pc game free download

download koplayer 2.0.0 for windows

collage maker program free download

download pc games compressed

mysore and other provinces question answer pdf download