Indian Climate
India
has tropical weather. One cannot speak of the climate of India, or else one
must speak of several different India's. The subcontinent has eight climatic
zones all of which only have the monsoon rains in common. But even the monsoon
comes to different parts of the country at different times. And you can fly
in the space of a couple of hours through a range of weather from the cold crisp
air of the mountains to the burning dry heat of the Rajasthan Desert where summer
temperature regularly reach 45°C and beyond.
It is beautiful to see the sand dunes shift and move to the will of the
winds, but not at all pleasant to be caught in a sand strom coming off the Thar.
In winter Rajasthan is dry and cold and the skies a translucent blue. There
is little rain and the monsoon winds often pass Rajasthan by leaving the prickly
thorny bushes, acacia trees and other native vegetation to pick up what little
dew the night bring with it.

Pumps
and tube wells lift water for agricultural irrigation but farmers often get
only a few distribution of water, particularly in the more arid areas of Jodhpur,
Bikaner and Jaisalmer, is systematically organized.
The wheat and sugarcane growing areas of the Punjab, Haryana and parts
of western Uttar Pradesh suffer from drastic extremes in climate. It can be
very cold from December - January, very dry and hot from the end of March till
June, very hot and humid till the monsoons arrive from July through September.
The rest of the year is comfortably pleasant. The fields are full of mustard
flowers, the air is redolent of sugarcane being crushed and molasses on the
boil.
Across the Gangetic plain, the summer months are an interminable heat
haze. From Gwalior through Bhopal and Raipur to Patna and Nagpur, temperature
begin to rise in March and by May they hover around 45°C. In the fields,
the earth actually shows deep cracks. In Bihar, for example, a terrible drought
with near famine conditions occurred a few year ago. The fickle winds had taken
the clouds several thousands miles westward to the Punjab, and India's granary
produced bumper crops that same year!
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