Summer
The first season in bengali calender is the summer. Summer (grisma) Comprises Baishakh and Jyaistha (mid-
April to mid-June), the two Bangla calendar months, when days are hot and dry. But the influence of summer is
usually felt from mid-March. The heat of the sun dries up the waterbodies including the rivers, canals and the
wetlands. The summer days are longer than the nights. At this time the southerly or southwesterly monsoons
flow over the country. When dry and cool streams of air flowing from the west and northwest come in contact
with rain laden clouds, storms occur, which, at times, take a violent form. During summer the sun shines hotly.
Summer is also the season of various fruits,various seasonal fruits ripe then. These storms are popularly known
as kalbaishakhi (nor’wester) or destructive Baishakh storm. The Bengali year begins with summer, with the
Pahela Baishakh (first day of Baishakh) being the Bangla New Year. Hindus observe many seasonal festivals
during this period. Summer is a season of fruits, with mango' [Am], blackberry' [Jam], starapple' [jamrul],
jackfruit' [Kathal], pineapple' [Anaras], guava' [Peyara], litchis, deuya (Artocarpus lacucha), watermelon, chalta
(Dillenia indica), latkan (Baccaurea remiflora), palmyra' [tal], and hog-plum (amda) available in plenty. This is
also the time when Roses, Bakul, Beli, Tagar and Jaba flowers blossom.