LOADING...

Back To Top

October 19, 2016

Bangladesh And It's Six Seasons

By
  • 0
Most people experience four seasons: winter, spring, summer, and fall/autumn. However, those four don’t extend to every place on earth. Because of the equatorial location of the tropics, that zone only experiences two seasons: wet and dry. Areas near the Indian Ocean, meanwhile, generally experience three seasons: winter, summer, and monsoon. For various reasons including agriculture, commerce, and cultural tradition, Bangladesh divides these three seasons into six: summer (grisma, in Bengali), monsoon (barsa), autumn (sharat), late autumn (hemanta), winter (shit), and spring (basanta).

The Bengali year begins with summer. This occurs from the equivalent of mid-April to mid-June, when the weather is hot and dry with the occasional violent storm. Monsoon season traditionally spreads from mid-June to mid-August, and brings with it up to 85% of the year’s total rainfall. A gradual decrease in temperature and humidity characterizes autumn, from mid-August to mid-October, then things get even cooler from mid-October to mid-December during late autumn. Mid-December to mid-February brings winter, the coolest and perhaps most pleasant season in Bangladesh, with average temperatures of 11–20ºC (52–68ºF). Finally, spring takes place from mid-February to mid-April, when warm breezes pick up and periodic thunderstorms punctuate the afternoons. Learn more about the seasons in the videos below.

Bangladesh: The Land Of Six Seasons

Explore the six seasons of Bangladesh and how they’re changing over time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRsqy5K_Svk
 

Prev Post

World's Fastest Ultra Wide Laowa 12mm f/2.8

Next Post

Battery that lasts 400 years???

post-bars
Mail Icon

Newsletter

Get Every Weekly Update & Insights

Leave a Comment