Climate in the Maldives
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Ideal weather for visiting the Maldives |
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Good weather for visiting the Maldives |
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Weather more variable but travel still possible,
and you can take advantage of the lowest holiday prices of the year! |
In a nation with less than one percent land and over 99 percent ocean,
the weather obviously plays a significant role in day-to-day life.
For a long time Maldivians have organised their lives based on a system
of nakaiy. Each nakaiy is 13 or 14 days long and is divided into two
seasons; iruvai, northeast monsoon, and hulhangu, southwest monsoon.
The nakaiy calendar is still used to determine such things as the best time
for fishing, travel or planting crops.
The Maldives has a tropical climate with warm temperatures all year round and
a great deal of sunshine. The warm tropical climate results in relatively minor
variations in daily temperature throughout the year. The hottest month, on average,
is April and the coolest is December. The weather is determined largely by the
monsoons.
There is a significant variation in the monthly rainfall levels. February is
the driest month, with January to April relatively dry, and May and October record
the highest average monthly rainfall. The southwest monsoon (hulhangu), from May
to September, is the wet season. Rough seas and strong winds are common during
this period. The northeast monsoon (iruvai) falls between December and April.
This is a period of clear skies, lower humidity and very little rain. The Maldives
is in the equatorial belt and therefore severe storms and cyclones are extremely
rare events. However, the country is affected whenever cyclones form in the Bay
of Bengal or the Arabian Sea. The spiralling clouds of the weather systems appear
over the Maldives causing spells of rain.
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