easy on autumn season in Kashmiri
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Answer:
Short essay on autumn season
There are four seasons in India. Autumn season is one of them. I like this season too much. It comes in between summer and winter. It’s a very healthy season because it’s either too hot or too cold. We are blessed with a normal temperature in this season. The season works as a transmitter of summer to winter when the days become shorter gradually. The speciality of this season is that the trees release their leaves in this season. This is why it is also known as fall. This is supposed as a temperature favour season in India because the weather becomes perfect at this season.
Durga puja, Diwali etc famous festival people enjoy in this season. We like to have a variety of food and travel to new places in autumn. Holidays also start in autumn due to many festivals. Carrots, cauliflower, onion, Spanish etc are some seasonal vegetables of autumn. This season is not good for cultivation. This season is too much supportive in poor people as they don’t face natural challenges it autumn. Rainy, Winter, Summer seasons are too tuff to sustain for poor peoples for rain, cold and hot weather. But autumn is too weather friendly. We see a yellow environment all around us. We get tired to clean fallen leaves outside the home.
Answer:
Autumn, also known as Harud locally, is the annual harvesting season in Kashmir. As the leaves in the valley turn yellow and golden, the farmers return to their fields to harvest paddy and saffron and pick various varieties of apples for export.
The entire valley is bathed in different hues of red, orange and gold during these months and a large number of tourists visit the area before the weather becomes excruciatingly cold. Children run around excitedly, trampling leaves and playing cricket under the shade of the mighty Chinar — which is considered a sign of resistance in the area. It is said that during the Mughal era in Kashmir, one of the kings stepped over the Chinar leaves during autumn. Fascinated by their bright red colour, he asked one his ministers, “Chi Naar”, which translates to, “What is this fire?” And during these few months, right before winter in Kashmir, it seems as if the flames are touching the ground.