The first rain is a ritual. The petrichor —that unique, intoxicating smell of rain hitting parched soil—rises like incense. Children run into the streets, palms upturned. For a few minutes, the world holds its breath. Then, the heavens open. It does not merely rain; it pours . The drops are not fine mist but heavy, fat coins of water that hammer rooftops, fill potholes, and turn dry riverbeds into raging torrents overnight.
For the farmer, the monsoon is wealth. Over 70% of India’s agriculture depends on these rains. The sowing of rice, sugarcane, and cotton begins. The paddy fields turn into a patchwork of liquid mirrors, where stooped figures in white kurta plant tender green shoots under a grey sky. The arrival of the rains is a festival— Teej in the north, Onam in the south—celebrated with swings on tree branches, yellow turmeric rice, and folk songs. rainy season of india
The season typically begins in June, announced not by calendars but by the senses. After months of brutal, dry heat that cracks the earth and wilts the leaves, the sky darkens. It is not a gentle dusk but a brooding, bruise-colored canopy that rolls in from the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. The first rain is a ritual
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