By Mark Rowe

Published: Wednesday, 24 November 2021 at 12:00 am


The dark evenings of mid-winter divide opinion. For some of us they’re an atmospheric component of living in northerly latitudes and make the longer summer hours all the more pleasurable. It’s fair to say, though, that a greater number of us dread them: seasonal affective disorder, caused by the lack of light at this time of year, is a recognised medical condition.

Unsurprisingly, the winter solstice on or around 21 December is a date that many people circle in the diary: thereon the days lengthen and the Northern Hemisphere begins it six-monthly trundle towards mid-summer and the summer solstice.

Our guide to the winter solstice explains what it is, when it takes place and the best places to catch a spectacular sunset in Britain. 

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Sunset at Barton-On-Sea on the Hampshire coast/Credit: Ian Wool, Getty

When is the winter solstice in 2021?

This year the official winter solstice, also known as the ‘hibernal solstice’, takes places on 21 December 2021. In London, the sun will set at approximately 15:53, marking the shortest period of daylight and the longest night of the year.

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The 14th-century Welsh poet Iolo Goch described Criccieth Castle as “the bright fort high on a rock” – visit it at sundown for a winter solstice walk/Credit: Rory Trappe, Alamy

True enough, the winter solstice is the shortest day and it seems reasonable to assume that on this day the sun will rise later than on any other day and set earlier. This, though, is not the case.

The earliest sunsets in the year occur about a week before the solstice, and the latest sunrises around early January. The days as a whole do get longer on 23 December because on this day the returning light in the evening finally outweighs the still diminishing morning light.

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So, if you’re wondering how you are going to make it through the dark winter nights, congratulations, you’ve already made it. You have up to 14 fewer dark nights to worry about.

Why is the case? This curiosity highlights a compromise in timekeeping that depends on two factors of the Earth’s motion in space:  it’s all to do with the angle the earth tilts towards the sun, and the difference between the human day (measured by clocks) and the solar day.

The winter solstice occurs on the day when the sun’s apparent altitude reaches its lowest point at noon. In celestial terms, this is when the sun reaches its greatest declination south of the celestial equator (a line in the sky created by projecting the Earth’s equator onto the stars) since the Earth’s north pole leans as far away from the sun as possible. The change in the sun’s declination around the solstice is very slow, as it rounds a curve and begins to rise up towards the equator again.

The longest of nights

The winter solstice is often described as the shortest 
day of the year. By default, this makes it the longest night, and an occasion worth celebrating. Ancient cultures saw it as a time of rebirth, welcoming back the light – a view maintained by many to this day. Here at Lammas Eco Village in Pembrokeshire, drummers, pipers and dancers gather together around a fire on the solstice to “honour the turning point in the Sacred Dance of our Earth Mother”.

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How long is a day?

Answer ’24 hours’ and Tom Kerss, an astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, will politely correct you. “The Earth’s rotation, which is very consistent, has been measured with respect to the stars to be 23 hours 56 minutes 4.1 seconds,” he explains. “Due to the history of timekeeping, we base our clocks on the length of a solar day – the time between noon today and noon tomorrow, or the time between two solar crossings of the meridian. We divide this into 24 hours, but in fact this figure isn’t consistent from one day to the next.

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The Royal Observatory Greenwich – home of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT)/Credit: unknown, Getty

“The length of a solar day fluctuates throughout the year by a maximum of not more than 30 seconds. Therefore, we take the average length of the solar day (24 hours) and call this a civil day. This has become the backbone of global timekeeping in the modern world.”

This fluctuation is a result of the shape of the Earth’s orbit, which is not a perfect circle centred on the sun, but an ellipse. What’s more, as it makes its annual journey around the sun, the Earth’s speed changes. “Between mid-November and early February, the Earth’s increased speed results in a very slight reduction in the speed that the Sun appears to drift through the sky, and solar days are longer than 24 hours,” says Kerss. “Since the civil day we measure with our clocks doesn’t change, solar time begins to lag behind, shifting sunrises and sunsets back against the clock. This delaying of solar phenomena against clock time causes sunset times to creep back before we reach the solstice, so the earliest sunset is actually experienced on a date earlier in the month.”


Ways to celebrate the winter Solstice

1. Ancient amble

Ancient cultures have revered the sun for centuries, and evidence of their biannual rituals can be found across the UK. Stonehenge is our most famous site, but there are many more to discover.

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Visit the mysterious Callanish Stones in Scotland/Credit: Swen Stroop, Getty

2. Go stargazing

Long nights have their advantages, not least when it comes to celestial matters. Embrace the magic of the dark sky with a night walk, dressing warm and gazing up at your favourite constellations.

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Dartmoor’s dark skies are a great place to go star gazing/Credit: Matt Stansfield, Getty

3. Make a wholesome feast

Cook a winter feast with friends and family. Include lots of warm, nourishing, local ingredients, setting a precedent for the year ahead as the days begin to lengthen once more.

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Celebrate the winter solstice with a winter feast/Credit: Mirko Vitali, Alamy

4. Make something out of natural materials

Create something handmade that celebrates new life and the natural world, such as a wreath – you can then hang this on your door or in your window, ready for Christmas.

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Collect holly and make a wreath/Credit: unknown, Alamy

5. Salute the sun

The winter solstice is a time of rebirth. Hail its life-giving powers by taking a sunset or sunrise walk to a local hilltop, your favourite shoreline or through winter fields as the first shoots begin to emerge.

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A view of the English Lake District, mountains in the North of England – nature/Credit: Karl Hendon, Getty

Where to see the earliest sunset?

Here are a few suggestions for places to go and enjoy the earliest sunset – weather permitting – and for somewhere to huddle and warm up afterwards. Note that in mid-winter rural pubs and cafes can shorten their opening hours, often at short notice, so it’s worth checking to see when places open and whether they serve food.

Solway Firth, Cumbria

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A classic sunset over the Solway Firth, taken on the West Cumbrian coastline on the English side of the firth/Credit: Fiona McAllister, Getty

The watery flatlands of the Solway Firth, a borderland where both England and Scotland seem to dissolve into the sea, is a stunning place to take in the sunset. A good location is the Solway’s Cardurnock peninsula: at its most westerly point you can see north and west while the view south to Skiddaw, the northerly summit of the Lake District, is positively cinematic. Then head to the town of Silloth for fish and chips. The town is something of an unexpected hotspot for chippies – try the Silloth cafe.

Selworthy Beacon, Somerset

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A walker passes the trig stone or trig point on the top of Selworthy Beacon on the South West Coastal Path near Minehead, Somerset/Credit: unknown, Getty

Fingers crossed for a clear sky at sunset from Selworthy Beacon, at the heart of the 5,000 hectare Holnicote Estate on Exmoor. To the west, a row of headlands that knits West Somerset to North Devon is lined up for inspection while the rocks of Hurlstone Point teeter their way down to the sweep of Porlock Bay. You can peer at the precipitous cliffs while the fading sunlight slants into the moor’s distinctive combes, or narrow valleys. Afterwards, retreat downhill and make your way to Porlock’s snug age-old pubs. Perhaps try a pie at the 13th century Ship Inn.

Tennyson Down, Isle of Wight

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Snow covers Tennyson down in a winter scene from Freshwater Bay, Isle of Wight/Credit: Jason Swain, Getty

The ski-board contours of Tennyson Down that sweep along the south-west of the Isle of Wight are a magnificent spot to watch the sunset. At its zenith, by the granite cross dedicated to Tennyson, the down is just 147m above sea level but the unrelenting ascent can leave you feeling every metre of the climb. Catch your breath and take in a truly magnificent view: not just the chalk Needles but a vast sweep of Hampshire across the Solent and Dorset curving away towards the setting sun. Turn around and you’ll be greeted by twinkling village lights and the whaleback landscape of Compton Down. You’re spoilt for choice for pubs on the island but a good destination is the cosy Highdown Inn in Totland, tucked away on Alum Bay old road.

Zennor Head, Cornwall

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Zennor Head in Cornwall offers the perfect spot to enjoy a winter sunset/Credit: unknown, Getty

Zennor Head is the perfect place to enjoy a winter sunset: an exposed headland that provides that exposed, ends-of-the nation experience. With good weather you can take in the changing colours of the shallow waters of Pendour Cove as they sublimate from aquamarine to ink-black. Look out for solitary stonechats flitting around the gorse (which may even be in flower) while looking east you may catch a kestrel – sometimes up to three synchronised individuals  – hovering in search of dinner. For your own meal, turn tail and head back to the car for a short drive west to the Gurnard’s Head pub: superb ales and wines and a head chef who really knows his stuff.

Dinas Island, Pembrokeshire

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At 463 feet in height, the Dinas Head cliffs provide excellent views across Fishguard Bay to the south and Newport Bay to the north/Credit: unknown, Getty

Close to the holiday resort of Newport, Dinas Island (it’s a promontory rather than an actual island) simply feels truly ancient. This is a gloriously primeval spot from which to watch a setting sun over St George’s Channel. The elemental outcrop of Strumble Head pokes out further west. A whole loop of the headland is three miles but you if don’t fancy completing the trail in the dark, good views can be had just 10 minutes uphill from the Pwllgwaelod car park. Right by the car park, pop into the Old Sailor pub where excellent food includes catches of the day such as lobster.


When is the Summer Solstice 2022?

The term summer solstice is derived from Latin and means ‘the sun stands still’. The summer solstice – also referred to as Midsummer – is often thought of as a day-long event, but in fact represents a single moment in time: when the sun is at northernmost point from the earth’s equator during a single year.