15
543070mins
Depends on where you are in Canada and what time of the year it is. You could get to places where there are 24 hours of daylight and six months later there is no daylight at all. So you can find it at any of the times in between at some point in Canada at different times of the year.
It depends on your latitude.
The answer is that when a nyan cat flies through the sky it leave a trail of rainbows. These rainbows make the sun get tired so it gives on hemisphere a little bit more sunlight so that the evil galgatrax doesn't unleash his magic toaster.
at least 14
In summer generally, there are 24 hours of daylight; in winter there are generally zero hours of daylight.
Has to do with the earths tilt and whether you live in the northern or southern hemisphere.
Twenty-four hours of daylight.
14.1
15
The sun rises at 06.30 hours and sets at 09.30 on a long summer day. That is 16 hours of sun!!
14 hours and 32 minutes
about 16.3 hours
It could be anywhere from 12 to 24 hours depending on what day and what latitude.
it varies but we get about 8 hours daylight in winter extending to about 16 hours in summer
the average hours of daylight in the the winter are 11 for Hawaii
There are 24 hours in any day of the year! If the question refers to daylight hours, then the location is required.