En effet c'est la fin de la mousson en novembre. Pour avoir connu le sud Thailandais 2 fois à cette période (coté océan Indien, comme Langkawi), je peux te dire que tu ne risques pas grand chose: si le temps n'est pas tout à fait stabilisé, les averses ne se produisent pas tous les jours et ne durent pas très longtemps (20 minutes), et les journées sans soleil sont assez rares. Plus tu t'éloigneras de Kuala Lumpur et remontera vers le nord, plus tu auras de chances de trouver du soleil.
Quelques photos de mes voyages: Bolivie, Pérou, Ladakh
Plus tu t'éloigneras de Kuala Lumpur et remontera vers le nord, plus tu auras de chances de trouver du soleil.
🤪 MDR ???? 😏 Vous avez consulté Madame Soleil en France ??? Je m'excuse mais en tant que résident je ne peux m'empêcher de réagir à vos allégations fantasques...
Pour le reste de votre message je vous donne raison.😉
La mousson en Malaisie affecte principalement la côte est et se termine entre mars et avril, donnez-vous la peine d'utiliser la fonction recherche de VF le sujet à déjà été abordé 25K fois...😕
Bien Cordialement.
Don't be famous....be useful...
Being happy doesn't mean everything is perfect.
It means you've decided to see beyond the imperfections."
Voici ce que dit madame soleil pour le mois de décembre (avec les liens vers le site de mme soleil):
Langkawi: 56mm de précipitations, 5 jours de pluie
Alor Setar (un peu plus au sud): 84mm, 7 jours de pluie
Pulau Pinang (Penang): 103mm, 9 jours de pluie
Kuala Lumpur: 246mm (4.4 fois plus qu'à Langkawi), 15 jours de pluie (3x plus qu'à Langkawi)
Alors c'est où qu'on a plus de chance d'avoir du soleil ? (ou moins de chance d'avoir la pluie ?)
Quelques photos de mes voyages: Bolivie, Pérou, Ladakh
En théorie les chiffres vous donnent raison, sur le terrain il faut cependant nuancer, les averses sont ici de type tropicale souvent brèves mais pouvant varier fortement au niveau de l'intensité.
En pratique une averse de même durée mais d'intensité supérieure donnera un volume de précipitations nettement supérieur, aucune mesure n'est effectué impliquant la durée, donc à ce niveau difficile d'affirmer.
Autre exemple le ciel peut être couvert par les nuages, donc pas de soleil, sans qu'aucune goutte de pluie tombe...😉
Au final cela ne vous permet pas de tirer la conclusion qu'il y a plus ou moins de soleil ici ou là.
Depuis que je vis ici je n'ai jamais consulté la météo, totalement inutile contrairement à votre vielle Europe...😎
Pour conclure, mon conseil: Oublier la météo, la Malaisie offre un climat exceptionnel tout au long de l'année et à tellement d'autres choses à vous offrir.
Le soleil vous sourira chaque matin et les averses sauront vous rafraichir en fin de journée.😛
Bon voyage et Salamat Datang to Malaysia. 😎
Bien Cordialement.
Don't be famous....be useful...
Being happy doesn't mean everything is perfect.
It means you've decided to see beyond the imperfections."
De toute façon il ne faut jamais oublier que la pluie, en Malaisie, est chaude au point que je m'y douche sous la pluie sans probléme, donc rien à voir avec la pluie en Europe au point de vue température, de plus, il y fait si chaud que même trempe on se retrouve sec trés rapidement.
Donc, comme dit Madog, oublier la météo.
bonjour madog
nous partons en fin janvier a kuala lumpur et kota bahru à ton avis on peut tenter les perhentians en fevrier yaura des liaisons bateau et les hotels sur place sont ouvert merci davance
Les Perenthians en Janvier c'est un peu le coup de poker, mais pourquoi pas au moins tu auras la tranquillité en + 😎
Pour les liaisons assure toi du coup avec ton hôtel car certains restent ouvert mais pas tous, ou regarder sur place par rapport à la météo.
Bon voyage
Bien Cordialement
Madog
Don't be famous....be useful...
Being happy doesn't mean everything is perfect.
It means you've decided to see beyond the imperfections."
merci beaucoup pour les conseils madog puisque nous passerons par kota bahru je vai tenter les perhentians et comme tu ma di jappelerais au paravant lhotel pour voir sil ya des liasons
Tu sais, madog, mottoh sait bien tout ça, je peux en témoigner... 😛
Il se trouve que la réalité du terrain, comme tu dis, est justement ce à partir de quoi on fait les statistiques de demain. Cela m'amuse toujours de lire certains dire que les statistiques ne servent à rien et ne reflètent pas la réalité 🤪, que c'est drôle... Car c'est justement à base des données climatologiques passées (et actuelles) que l'on fait ces statistiques qui illustrent le temps dit "normal"; c'est d'ailleurs pour ça qu'on les appelle "normale".
Bref, pour avoir passé 2 mois 1/2 en Malaisie, et connaissant un tout petit peu le climat en général 😇, oui plus on va vers le Nord, moins on a de chances de voir de la pluie en décembre, c'est un fait. Après, la variabilité naturelle climatique, ajoutée à quelques particularités locales, amènent quelques surprises oui, mais en moyenne c'est ça.
Mais c'est certain que, hormis la côte Est lors de la saison des pluies (nov. à mars environ), et Bornéo 😎, on est rarement embêté par la pluie.
Oui c'est risqué, nov dec janv sont des périodes de mousson et je peux te garantir que ce n'est pas passager, le ciel est gris, bas, l'air surchargé d'humidité et il peut pleuvoir sans discontinuer pendant plusieurs jours, les locaux le confirment la saison propice s'échelonne d'avril à septembre.
Si tu veux changer de destination, je suis allée en Thailande et au Laos en novembre 2007, début de la saison fraiche et séche c'était parfait !
salam madog
si je puis me permettre, ma soeur et moi comptons partir le 30 nov jusq'au 12 décembre en malaisie inchaAllah, étant résidant la bas, j'aimerais que vous nous donnez des renseignements
nous ne partons pas en voyage organisé, mais à l'aventure
nous atteririons a KL puis direction malacca puis KL et remontée doucement au nord pour terminer notre séjour sur langkawi inchaAllah et profiter de ses belles plages
au niveau du climat, nous espérions du soleil au moins a langkawi inchAllah, quel endroit exact pour pratiquer snorkeling
au niveau des étapes, nous recherchons le coté culturel, et privilégier la façon de vivre des malaisiens, vous nous conseillez d'aller où
au niveau de l'hébergement, j'ai entendu que bcp de malaisiens étaient en vacance en décembre, cela est vrai
d'avance merci
nadia
Pour le Snorkeling sur Langkawi, il ne faut pas y compter.
J'y passe un mois tous les ans et je n'y ai encore jamais trouvé d'eau limpide, la visi est quasi nulle ou que ce soit sur les 99 iles alentours.
Je suis allée sur la Péninsule en novembre il y a 2 ans, en période de mousson, chaleur moite, ciel gris et bas, ce n'est pas du tout la bonne époque donc à éviter, nous avons eu de la chance car sur les 6 jours passés à Langkawi seulement 2 jours de pluie mais il avait tombé des trombes d'eau 15 jours auparavant sans discontinuer, il y a 3 sortes de climat en fonction de l'endroit où vous allez, côte est, côte ouest et Bornéo. Bien vérifier sur internet.
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we’re planning to travel through Patagonia (Chile and Argentina) in February and March 2027.
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I’ve planned a three-week itinerary for this summer, from August 9 to 27, in Sri Lanka:
Negombo – 1 night
Sigiriya and the Cultural Triangle – 4 nights
Kandy – 2 nights
Ella – 3 nights
Tangalle – 6 nights
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I know the east would be better, but (i) I’m struggling to find suitable accommodation, and (ii) it adds a lot of travel time, and my kids can only handle about 3 hours at a stretch.
I looked into Arugam Bay, but it’s a 7-hour trip back to Colombo from there.
I’ve checked every weather site imaginable, but they don’t all agree. Do you think we’ll spend our whole trip in the rain, or is the monsoon in the south mostly limited to the sea, as I’ve read?
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After reading quite a few posts and buying a guidebook, I’m still struggling to finalize my suitcase.
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We’ve booked our flight tickets and we’re leaving from October 29th to November 13th for Mauritius.
I just reserved our accommodation in Cap Malheureux.
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Hi everyone,
I need to go to Sri Lanka at the end of January.
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Does anyone have more information?
Would it be wiser to postpone our trip?
Thanks, Alain.
Hi,
I’m planning a trip to Oman, probably the first half of February to avoid the extreme heat and Ramadan.
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What would be the ideal month to explore Oman without extreme heat or rain? November?
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So great to be back on this forum after being away for—I don’t even know what!
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Hey everyone! 🙂
Just giving you the quick context: A group of friends and I are planning a trip to South Korea (Seoul/Busan) at the end of June/July next year. It falls right in the middle of the monsoon season, but we don’t really have other availability options.😕
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Thanks in advance to anyone who takes the time to read or reply to this post! 🙂
Hi everyone.
Not sure if guidebooks, agencies, and other tour operators are keeping up by changing their visiting hours and offerings.
Personally, I see a promising opportunity here—jumping on this adaptation to extreme climates before others do, since they’re inevitably coming.
From my own travel experience, I’ve met a few guides so far who are starting to adjust, like in Egypt, Kenya, Senegal, and elsewhere.
They avoid crowds and the hottest hours by starting their tours around 6–7 AM, when it’s cooler.
Yeah, you’ve gotta wake up early, but the payoff is so worth it. 😴
If you’ve got any great tips like this, why not discuss them in this thread and share addresses or websites where the people in charge have realized climate change is real and are adapting? 😊
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It seems that in recent years, January and February in Bohol have seen an increase in rainy periods. Have any of you noticed this?
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I’m wondering if I should just pack fleece joggers or sweatpants for the kids and my husband, at least for the first and last days, to be comfortable on the plane?
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I’m planning a 10-day trip to Greenland in early August.
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Sunny destinations in October???
Not too much rain.
Martinique, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Mauritius, Cape Verde, or somewhere else?????
Any tips? Thanks for your help
Hi there, I’m planning a trip to Thailand from October 16 to 29, 2025, with my two teens.
We’d love to explore Southern Thailand (for the beaches...).
I’ve read that it’s the end of the rainy season—do you think it’s a bad idea or not?
Also, I’m familiar with traffic in Asian countries—it’s pretty challenging.
Do you think I should go through an agency for a well-defined itinerary?
Or do you have any tips for hotels and getting around?
Looking forward to hearing from you, and thanks in advance! 😊
Mylène