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By: Rubby
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka doesn’t promote ‘monsoon tourism’ as aggressively as Kerala. But it may as well. The island country shares a lot with Kerala-landscape, culture, food, climate and more and now it is promoting ayurveda. The monsoon is the traditional season for ayurvedic treatments; it’s also the traditional season of the scared tourist. Which makes it a great time for the less timid to explore the beautiful country. Include the beach resort town of Bentota in your monsoon itinerary-located at the mouth of a large flat estuary; it’s safe for watersports all year round, even in the monsoon.

Cambodia
Most of Southeast Asia is privy to the same monsoon that lights up our lives back home. So what’s special about travelling to those countries at this time? Too many to count, but if you were looking for one outstanding reason, here it is: visiting Cambodia’s Angkor temples in the rains. Of recent years, one of the world’s grandest set of monuments has become one of the world’s biggest tourist traps-hordes teem around the great Angkor Wat at all hours all yea-round. Except during the monsoon. The region is also extra-beautiful at this time, the shiny green providing a perfect backdrop to the grave stone buildings.



Zanzibar
For most of us Zanzibar is a place that exists only in history books. It was at Zanzibar, centuries ago, that Arab dhows awaited the monsoon winds to pick up speed so they could sail off to India. The monsoon winds still connect India and this archipelago off the coast of Tanzania. Like at home, the southwest monsoon winds, called kusi here, blow over the island from June to September while the northeast winds of kaskazi last from November to March. But unlike India, these winds bring no rain to these islands; rain falls bet2ween the two monsoons from March to May. With winds ranging from 15 to 30 knots, the monsoon is perfect for kite surfing.

North American Monsoon
The North American Monsoon (NAM) starts in late May in southern Mexico and spreads along the western slopes of the Sierra Madre Occidental, reaching Arizona and New Mexico in early July. It’s the result of a high-pressure ridge, which moves northwards during summer and a thermal low created by surface heating over the Mexican Plateau and the desert southwest of the United States. It might be much smaller and weaker than the monsoon systems of the Indian subcontinent but it leads to some spectacular storms in the Sonoran and Mojave deserts, reviving desert streams and leading to a temporary greening. Lightning storms are also a common sight during the monsoon. Head to the city of El Cajon in California to see some astonishing thundershowers.


Did you find this article useful? For more useful tips, hints, guide and points to ponder pertaining to traveling, do please browse at our websites.


www.aonetrip.com
www.22geetravels.com
www.hellotravellers.com
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