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Question

Why is kharif crop grown season

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Solution

Kharif crops are usually sown with the beginning of the first rains in January, during the south-east monsoon season in parts of India and in Bangladesh. In other parts like maharashtra the west coast of India and in Pakistan that see rains in June, kharif crops are sown in May, June and July.
In India, the kharif season varies by crop and state, with kharif starting at the earliest in May and ending at the latest in January, but is popularly considered to start in June and to end in October. Kharif stand in contrast with the rabi crops, cultivated during the dry season. In Kharif season the seeds are sown in the beginning of the Monsoon season. After maturation these crops are harvested at the end of monsoon season(oct-Nov)
Kharif crops are usually sown with the beginning of the first rains towards the end of May in the southern state of Kerala during the advent of south-west monsoon season. As the monsoon sowing dates vary accordingly and reach July in some north Indian states.
These crops are dependent on the quantity of rain water as well its timing. Too much, too little or at the wrong time may lay waste the whole year's efforts.
Common Kharif crops
Jowar
Rice (paddy and deepwater)
Millet
Maize (corn)
Soybean
Turmeric
Groundnut
Cotton
Sugarcane
Bitter Gourd
Linseed (flax)
Green Gram (moong)
Sesame (till)
Arhar (tur)
Black Gram (urad)
Cowpea (chavala)

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