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Satellite image of Southern Africa
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Botswana's climate is
semi-arid. Though it is hot and dry for much of the year, there
is a rainy season, which runs through the summer
months. Rainfall tends to be erratic, unpredictable and highly
regional. Often a heavy downpour may occur in one area while 10
or 15 kilometres away there is no rain at all. Showers are often
followed by strong sunshine so that a good deal of the rainfall
does not penetrate the ground but is lost to evaporation and transpiration.
'Pula', one of
the most frequently heard words in Botswana, is not only the name
of Botswana's currency, but also
the Setswana word
for rain. So much of what takes place in Botswana relies on this
essential, frequently scarce commodity.
Seasons
The summer season begins
in November and ends in March. It usually brings very high temperatures.
However, summer is also the rainy season, and cloud coverage and
rain can cool things down considerably, although only usually for
a short period of time.
The winter season begins
in May and ends in August. This is also the dry season when virtually
no rainfall occurs. Winter days are invariably sunny and cool to
warm; however, evening and night temperatures can drop below freezing
point in some areas, especially in the southwest.
The in-between periods
- April/early May and September/October - still tend to be dry,
but the days are cooler than in summer and the nights are warmer
than in winter.

Rainfall

The storm is coming
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The rainy season is
in the summer, with October and April being transitional months.
January and February are generally regarded as the peak months.
The mean annual rainfall varies from a maximum of over 650mm in
the extreme northeast area of the Chobe District to a minimum of
less than 250mm in the extreme southwest part of Kgalagadi District
(see the map for districts). Almost
all rainfall occurs during the summer months while the winter period
accounts for less than 10 percent of the annual rainfall. Generally,
rainfall decreases in amount and increases in variability the further
west and south you go.
Temperatures
Summer days are hot,
especially in the weeks that precede the coming of the cooling rains,
and shade temperatures rise to the 38°C mark and higher, reaching
a blistering 44°C on rare occasions. Winters are clear-skied
and bone-dry, the air seductively warm during the daylight hours
but, because there is no cloud cover, cold at night and in the early
mornings. Sometimes bitterly so - frost is common and small quantities
of water can freeze.

Humidity
In summer during the
morning period humidity ranges from 60 to 80% and drops to between
30 and 40% in the afternoon. In winter humidity is considerably
less and can vary between 40 and 70% during the morning and fall
to between 20 and 30% in the afternoon.
For tourists, the best
visiting months are from April through to October - in terms of
both weather and game viewing. It is during this period that the
wildlife of the great spaces gather around what water there is -
the natural waterholes and the borehole-fed dams - and are at their
most visible.

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