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4 seasons of india
4 seasons of india
4 seasons of india
4 seasons of india
4 seasons of india
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This is wedding season. The dry air is kind to silk and heavy jewelry. The sounds of shehnai (oboe) and wedding trumpets fill the night. Winter also brings Lohri (the bonfire festival of the Punjab), Pongal (the harvest festival of Tamil Nadu), and Makar Sankranti (the kite-flying festival), marking the sun’s journey northward. 2. Summer (March – May): The Great Burn If winter is a gentle whisper, summer is a roar. This is the season that separates the tourist from the local. By April, the sun becomes a hammer. By May, the land cracks open in thirst.

This is the climax of the Indian year. Within six weeks, the country celebrates Navratri (nine nights of dance), Dussehra (burning the effigies of the demon king Ravana), Diwali (the festival of lights—the equivalent of Christmas in the West), and then Eid (depending on the lunar calendar). The sky glitters with fireworks. Homes are lit with diyas (oil lamps). It is a season of victory (good over evil), light over dark, and abundance. The Sixth Season (The Hindu Ritu ): The Transition It is worth noting that in the ancient Sanskrit calendar, India has six seasons. The four above are the modern grouping. The traditional six add Hemanta (the "cool" early winter—December) and Shishira (the "dewy" late winter—January). But in the modern mind, the cycle is complete with the four. Conclusion To witness the four seasons of India is to witness a planet operating at full throttle. It is not a subtle slide from one temperature to another; it is a violent, passionate, fragrant, and noisy rotation of extremes. The dust of summer, the mud of the monsoon, the smoke of winter bonfires, and the sparkle of autumn fireworks—these are the four colors of India. The land dies, drowns, is reborn, and celebrates, every single year, without fail. And the people, resilient as the earth itself, dance through every beat of the cycle. 4 seasons of india

The earth turns to dust. Rivers shrink to muddy trickles. The once-green deciduous forests of central India turn a parched, dusty yellow. The heat is not just felt; it is seen as a shimmering haze on the horizon (a mirage). The loo —hot, howling winds that blow across the Indo-Gangetic Plain—can feel like a hair dryer on full blast. Temperatures in Rajasthan and Vidarbha regularly touch 48°C (118°F). Cities like Delhi and Ahmedabad become ghost towns between 1 PM and 4 PM. This is wedding season

Пусть другие тоже знают! Winter also brings Lohri (the bonfire festival of

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