When Spock spoke to the Guardian and specified a destination date, he gave both a number of years and a month. Now why would he mix Earth years and Vulcan months? Spock could have just as easily have said thirty Earth years followed by (hypothetically) "the month of September." Or whatever the matching month would have been.I wish to visit the planet Vulcan, thirty years past, the month of Tasmeen.
However, if he did give a Vulcan month name, doesn't it make a certain amount of sense that the year figure was also in Vulcan indigenous units? In Yesteryear, Spock would seem to be thirty-seven years of age, most likely thirty-seven Vulcan years.
Somewhere I latched on to Spock's age during TOS being approximately fifty Earth years, maybe because it's about half of Sarek's age. I read a series of stories (by Jean Lorran) about Sarek's and Amanda's courtship and marriage, Sarek's first Pon Farr was shortly thereafter, if Spock's first Pon Farr was at a similar age as Sarek's, then Spock is half Sarek's age. Those stories were non-canon of course.
All that would make a Vulcan year about a third longer than a Earth year.
I'm hung up on the idea that Vulcan orbits a huge (okay, low density) gas giant, like Jupiter and Saturn, it possesses sixty or more moons, a small number of which are "planet-size," and class M.Why are many hung up with Earth-Moon analogues.
If Vulcan is in fact tidal locked, okay. Fiction depicts Vulcans as possessing a lot of stamina, able to go many days without sleep. If the orbital period of Vulcan (it's day) were 250 to 350 hours long, then this for Vulcans is a perfectly normal day.
