Find some local (ie, hop close and low latency) NTP servers and add the follow global line(s):
ntp server ntp_server_ip
3 "local" California NTP servers I prefer are:
ntp server 165.227.1.1
ntp server 63.192.96.2
ntp server 132.239.254.5
You can also make your router an NTP server as well (I do that on our external router, and point other inside routers and hosts at it):
ntp master
NTP Server listings (Use Secondaries):
Once set, you can do ntp commands such as:
#show ntp associations
address ref clock st when poll reach delay offset disp
+~165.227.1.1 140.142.16.34 2 39 1024 377 35.1 -1.22 14.8
*~63.192.96.2 204.152.184.72 2 39 1024 377 51.5 2.14 6.0
+~132.239.254.5 164.67.62.194 2 842 1024 367 51.6 -8.64 3.4
* master (synced), # master (unsynced), + selected, - candidate, ~ configured
#show ntp status
Clock is synchronized, stratum 3, reference is 63.192.96.2
nominal freq is 252.0161 Hz, actual freq is 252.0211 Hz, precision is 2**7
reference time is BD5D98CD.9218F7CD (20:43:09.570 PDT Sun Sep 3 2000)
clock offset is -3.6675 msec, root delay is 65.66 msec
root dispersion is 18.48 msec, peer dispersion is 7.86 msec