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Central and South American Climate Overview
I’m starting more serious route planning for my upcoming trip to South America. I’d always heard that October is a good time to leave the US for Mexico but I started wondering if the weather would allow me to head out earlier. I started doing a little weather research and ending up putting together a Central and South American Climate Overview. Based on this information it looks like October is indeed a good time to head south with the other opportunity being in the March timeframe.
Has anyone ridding through Central America during the raining season (May – October)? Does it rain all the time or only in the afternoons/evenings? -Jeff |
hi Jeff,
i don't have anything to contribute, but thanks for your effort to put the data together. i am in san cristobal de las casas now and was sort of contemplating the rest of the trip. i didn't do any planning except to start in alaska june 1st. and follow the birds south. So far this worked out pretty well ;-) Entered Mexico early october. So far i got a few showers in Creel and a couple of days ago near Tuxla. (pretty windy here too....) Although it seems that Colombia will get a bit nasty, 3 months from now. please feel free to ask any questions about routes, roads etc. cheers Sander |
I'm looking at leaving in March as well.
My departure has been delayed so I'm looking at the possibility of leving the USA for South America in March as well. I'll follow you post since it looks like we are both interested in the same trip around the same time.
I most interested in knowing if the mountain passes in Peru and Bolivia can be driven during this time period. |
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February until mid-March is rainy season in Bolivia. You will get a few windows of good weather, but will be a hit & miss type thing. However, reportedly this year the area is getting a lower rain fall than usual, a drought in South western Bolivia and northern Argentina along with high temperatures affecting cattle and other animals.
Last year about the same period of time I was riding to Toro-Toro (in the province of Potosi) and we encountered lots of water and mud. Had a hard time on those river bed roads. I hope this helps. Have fun and ride safe! |
Thanks for all the feedback.
Sander, your trip looks good so far. I’ll mark for blog and start following it. I understand the no planning thing. I rarely do it for the rides I do in the US. Typically I just head out with some destination in mind. Quote:
I read one trip report of a guy in Central America that was there during the rainy season. Seems like for that area, you can ride until around noon and then the rain will start. |
Departing in March but arriving later
I'm following this thread with grat interest and thank those who have replied. If I leave the USA in March I'm thinking I will not reach Peru and Bolivia until June and I'm very concerned that the mountain passes will be blocked with snow. Of course, I'm also concerned with the rain and mud in Central America as well.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated since I've never done something like this before. I've bought the bike, saved the money, and I'm ready to go! |
Have fun .... planning is the best part!
Patrick :scooter: |
After mid-march to June, from Southern Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Northern Chile, you down have to worry much about rain, specially going East, crossing the Andes. From June to early July the winter snows start falling, specially up in higher elevations, the passes. The more south you go, the early the winter season starts.
Bolivia is reporting a draught for this year. Rain fall is very low compared to other years. I'm in USA, but if anyone requires a helping hand in Bolivia, specially in Cochabamba, please PM. |
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For some reason, as I get older, I don’t mind getting that early start either :mchappy: -Jeff |
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Is it impossible to get cross the Andes in the winter? |
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Jeff, thank you for that very useful data chart. Exactly what I was looking for in terms of long-range planning. I'm also planning an extended trip through LatAm and beyond.
So, regarding Latin America, to me it seems like the four factors dictating favorable riding weather are 1) Avoid the rainy season in Central Am, May-Oct 2) Avoid riding the Andes' passes in winter, Jun-Jul 3) Avoid the Amazon's rainy season, Feb-May 4) Try to do Ushuaia from Nov-Jan So, how does this sound: Depart the US around September, get to Colombia by Jan, head down to Bolivia by April, cross into Brazil, get to Buenos Aires by Aug, slowly work down to TDF by Nov/Dec and end back in BA to ship out by Jan (onwards to Europe and Africa). :scooter: Things I'd like to time appropriately: seeing the salt falts not under water, not riding Amazon in rainy season, spending good time in Andes high altitude, favorable TDF trip. I've adopted the mentality that 'the slower you go, the cheaper it gets' :thumbup1: |
Jeff, thanx to you, I spent a productive day at work pouring over climate data :thumbup1:
and wanted to share with everyone: Taking Jeff's idea, I made a Latin America Climate Overview Google Docs Spreadsheet with a few more cities and in a route that I'm contemplating. Enjoy: >>http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pxDmUzzidN7yywBl85zQ4CA |
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Looks like a very nice plan! Nice addition to the chart too. I agree, slowing down is a much better way to travel :Beach: and the funds do seem to last longer! -Jeff |
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