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In a country
where topography varies wildly,
climatic conditions are only
bound to vary wildly too.
Classified as a hot tropical
country by many, that is a
definition that holds true for
most of but not all of India.
Exceptions include the northern
states of Himachal Pradesh and
Jammu & Kashmir in the north and
Sikkim in the northeastern
hills.
In most of India summer is hot.
It begins in April and continues
till the beginning of October.
The heat peaks in June with
temperatures in the northern
plains and the west soaring
above 46° C. The monsoons hit
the country during this period
too, beginning 1st of
June when they are supposed to
find the Kerala coast. Moisture
laden trade winds sweep the
country bringing relief to a
parched northern India but
devastation in the east where
the rivers Brahmaputra and Ganga
flood annually. Tamil Nadu in
the south receives rainfall
between October and December,
beneficiary of the retreating
monsoons.
India’s extensive coastline lies
almost entirely below the Tropic
of Cancer. The coast is usually
warm and moist, prone to heavy
rains in the monsoons and high
summer temperatures. The eastern
coast is vulnerable to cyclones.
Winters here are mild and
pleasantly sunny.
Hill Stations are the happy
peculiarity that came up here
when British wives and officers
needed to flee the oppressive
heat and malaria of the plains.
Quaint towns that buzz along
"mall roads", tucked away in
hills all over India, they are
now weekend getaways at the
height of summer for families
and couples from India’s cities.
The plains in the north and even
the barren countryside of
Rajasthan reel under a cold wave
every year in December-January.
Minimum temperatures could dip
below 4° C but maximum
temperatures usually do not fall
lower than 12° C. In the
northern high altitude areas of
Himachal Pradesh, Jammu &
Kashmir, Sikkim, and parts of
Uttar Pradesh, it snows through
the winter and even summer
months are only mildly warm.
The east receives rain from
April to August. September to
November is relatively dry and
the region only has sporadic
showers. There are winter rains
in December and January. This
abates for two months and then
it’s time for the monsoon season
yet again. The central plateau
has similar climate to the north
but the mercury does not dip as
low in winter. It rains from
mid-June to September. |