I wasn't basing my opinion on that user's video, one way or the other. I was basing it on what people who live near the poles experience.
Here are two websites which catalog the length of day and night for cities in Chile (closer to the south pole), when the sun rises and sets, for Santiago, Chile, and Punta Arenas, Chile. Santiago is in the middle of Chile, and Punta Arenas is at the southern tip, close to Antarctica. They both show that they have very long daylight hours around December, and short daylight hours around July, the exact opposite of areas close to the north pole. This is amplified at Punta Arenas, because it's closer to the south pole.
There are some homesteaders in Alaska that I follow on Youtube, and they show video proof of the difference in daylight hours throughout the year. They have lots of videos and timelapses of nature within their videos, and even talk about the wild changes in length of day throughout the year in some of their videos.
The time laps video posted by u/925thejoyisgone/ Is a fake though. The clouds are the same at the ends as the beginning.
I wasn't basing my opinion on that user's video, one way or the other. I was basing it on what people who live near the poles experience.
Here are two websites which catalog the length of day and night for cities in Chile (closer to the south pole), when the sun rises and sets, for Santiago, Chile, and Punta Arenas, Chile. Santiago is in the middle of Chile, and Punta Arenas is at the southern tip, close to Antarctica. They both show that they have very long daylight hours around December, and short daylight hours around July, the exact opposite of areas close to the north pole. This is amplified at Punta Arenas, because it's closer to the south pole.
There are some homesteaders in Alaska that I follow on Youtube, and they show video proof of the difference in daylight hours throughout the year. They have lots of videos and timelapses of nature within their videos, and even talk about the wild changes in length of day throughout the year in some of their videos.
Wrong.
Close to the south pole has 24 hour sun during the summer months of the southern hemisphere, which are between November to February.