When do "Leap Day" babies celebrate birthdays

In the Death Pool it was mentioned the Night Stalker was a Leap Day baby. Do most celebrate Feb 28th or March 1st?

It depends.

Agreed. Some celebrate the last day of February and others the day after Feb. 28.

I’m pretty sure my cousin always did it on March 1 (except, of course, on leap years, when his actual Feb 29 birthday rolled around).

In the case of my mother (who was born on a Monday, February 29th), they circumvented the problem by claiming she was born one day earlier. The birth certificate was issued accordingly.

That seems a bit of an odd reaction. What was the reason for your grandparents’ decision to do this? Fear of uniqueness?

As far as I recall, she was told that she was born late in the evening on that day, so it wasn’t such a big deal. I guess her parents wanted to avoid the oddity.

Edit:

I meant to write: She was born early in the morning on that day.

My late grandfather-in-law celebrated his birthday on the 28th, always, except obviously when there was a 29th day.

The good thing was that he got extra special birthdays every few years when it really was his birthday! And then special ones like when he was the same age as his grandson, my SO :smiley:

Physicist, art critic, and incorrigible punster George Christoph Lichtenberg (1742-1799) had an interesting suggestion. as far as I know, no one’s taken it up:

Cite available upon request.

Some countries have legal definitions. According to Wikipedia, The UK and Hong Kong declare your birthday to be Mar 1 in common years. Taiwan and New Zealand use February 28.

They also later include the U.S. in this latter group, but I have doubts that is true. For one thing I’d assume it was done on a state-by-state basis.

All the Leap Babies I knew celebrated on their birthday–February 29th. If you only have a party once every four years, it can be a heck of a party.

Problem is, when you send out invitations for your 5th birthday party, you end up with some weird presents for a guy in college.

Cecil expounds.

Summary: He shows how to compute the right day (February 28 or March 1) by computing one’s age by the hour, starting from the hour of birth, and adding exactly 365¼ days’ worth of hours for each year. Depending on the exact hour of birth, you get some pattern of 2/28 and 3/1 birthdays for the next three years.