Temperature, probability of rain, cloudiness and ultraviolet rays are some of the data you should know before leaving home. (Infobae/Jovani Pérez)
Before leaving your house, find out the weather forecast in San Francisco de Macoris for the following hours on this November 29.
The probability of precipitation For this Friday in San Francisco de Macoris it is 25% during the day and 25% at night.
Meanwhile, cloudiness will be 95% during the day and 79% during the night.
As to the temperature A maximum of 30 degrees and a minimum of 20 degrees is forecast in this region. Ultraviolet rays are forecast to reach a level of up to 2.
While wind gusts will reach 26 kilometers per hour during the day and 17 kilometers per hour at night.
The weather forecast in San Francisco de Macoris (Illustrative image Infobae)
San Francisco de Macorís is a municipality in the Dominican Republic, capital of the province of Duarte, located in the eastern part of the Cibao Valley between the Eastern and Northern Cordilleras, in the north of the Central American country.
In the city of San Francisco de Macorís, as in much of the Dominican nation, the dominant climate is tropical.
The warmest months of the city are between June and August, while in the coldest ones they go from December to February.
The rain is constant in this Dominican city, with May to October being the months with the most rainfall in the year.
Being a Caribbean nation, The Dominican Republic has a mainly tropical climate, with abundant rain and an average temperature between 25 degrees and 30 degrees..
The rainy season begins in May and ends until November, with the months of May, August and September being the ones that report the most torrential rainfall in Dominican lands.
Despite being a tropical country, there are regions, mainly in high areas such as Constanza, Jarabacoa and Ocoa, where the temperature can drop considerably in winter, reaching -5 degrees in winter.
Dominican Republic is prone to hurricanes and, on average, one occurs every seven or eight years, as well as a tropical storm every four years, not counting floods.