The clock gets pushed forward an hour on Sunday morning. Here's what some Manitobans think about the time change.

Ashley is a stay-at-home-mom, so the time change potentially means one less hour of sleep for her and her two kids. "It's definitely an adjustment," Ashley said. "You have to rearrange naptimes and start the routine all over again."

You might think being in the work force would be easier, but Tammy said it's actually worse. "Before I was at home so I could find a naptime, but now I can't," she said. Tammy used to be a stay-at-home-mom, or 'domestic engineer', as she called it.

Heidi works at daycare so she sees the affects of all these kids after they have lost that hour. "It throws off their routine," Heidi said. "The next morning, you can see more negative behavior, they are visibly grumpier than normal and it throws off their whole routine." She said they make sure the kids get down for a nap, which can help get them back into that routine.

One person who doesn't notice the time change at work is Ruth. She is a children's pastor here in Winnipeg and said it doesn't affect the kids that much because they usually have a weird schedule on weekends. "Parents do different things all the time on weekends, and sometimes it affects their sleep," she said.

Clocks will officially change in Winnipeg on Sunday, March 12 at 2:00:00 a.m. CST.