It's a time to ask for deals on hotels and tours, although prices in Bolivia are already very reasonable. You won't see hoards of tourists descending on Bolivia in March, as the weather is still too far from perfect in both the Andes and the Amazon for the country to warrant that many visits. A steady seven hours of sun daily can be expected: a sweet two more than most of the Andes can hope for at this time. Santa Cruz is broadly representative of this region as a whole, where the good news is that rainfall is dropping right off this month (just 4.7 inches/ 120mm are expected to fall). The average temperature range right now is 70-88☏/21-31☌. Rainfall stays high this month (9.3 inches/ 235mm on average) here and sunshine, as the previous two months, remains at six hours average daily, the year's joint-lowest level. RainforestĬobija, in the far north near the Brazilian border, is broadly representative of this region. Of course, compared to this region at other times of year, and to other regions at this time, that is still quite wet! And to compound things, it will feel cold: whilst temperatures remain in the 37-55☏/3-13☌ range, there are fewer daily hours of sunshine than any other time of year in March in La Paz (five). It's drier than any month since November in La Paz at the moment, with 2.8 inches/70mm of precipitation likely on average. La Paz is broadly representative of this region as a whole. There is the high-altitude Andes in the west, with a climate similar to the Andean region of Peru, the lush hot and humid rainforest in the north and the savanna region in the south and east, which is largely covered by the Gran Chaco and is predominantly semi-arid with little tree cover. Bolivia, like many South American countries, is divided into several geographical zones, each of which has its own distinct climate.
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