Everything you need to know about Jeth — key dates, 18 Jeth tradition, farming cycle, festivals, and how this ancient month shapes life in Punjab.
32Days
3rdDesi Month
May 15 – Jun 152026
2082Bikrami
📋 Table of Contents
- What Is Jeth? Introduction & Background
- Jeth 2026 Calendar — Important Dates
- 18 Jeth — A Special Local Tradition
- Jeth Weather & Farming Cycle
- Religious & Cultural Significance
- Chabeel — The Tradition of Selfless Service
- Home & Health Tips for Jeth
- Frequently Asked Questions
When the sun blazes at its peak, the loo wind scorches the fields, wheat has just been harvested, and the scent of mangoes fills the air — Jeth has arrived. This is not just another month on the calendar. It is Punjab’s month of endurance, hard work, and deep-rooted tradition. Read on to discover everything about Jeth — from its calendar dates to the unique ritual of 18 Jeth that is observed in specific villages of Pakistan.
What Is Jeth? Introduction & Background
Jeth (ਜੇਠ / جیٹھ) is the third month of the Punjabi Bikrami (Desi) calendar. It falls between May 15 and June 15 every year and consists of 32 days — making it one of only two months in the Bikrami calendar that has 32 days (the other being Harh).
The Bikrami calendar traces its roots to approximately 100 BC, during the reign of Raja Bikram Ajit. It is a solar calendar used for centuries across Punjab, India, and Pakistan by Sikh, Hindu, and farming communities to track crop cycles, religious events, and cultural festivals.
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Season
Intense summer heat, scorching loo winds, temperatures above 40°C, warm nights
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Gregorian Dates
May 15 to June 15, 2026 — Bikrami year 2082
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Crops
Wheat and barley harvest complete; Kharif crop preparation begins
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Days
32 days — the longest days of the year fall within this month
Jeth 2026 Calendar — Important Dates
Below are all the key dates in Jeth 2026. These dates guide religious worship, agricultural planning, and cultural observances for communities across Punjab and beyond.
| Desi Date | Event / Occasion | English Date | Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Jeth | Sangrand Jeth (First Day of Month) | May 15, 2026 | Friday |
| 11 Jeth | Masya (New Moon / Amavas) | May 25, 2026 | Monday |
| 18 Jeth | 🌟 18 Jeth — Special Local Tradition | June 1, 2026 | Monday |
| 22 Jeth | Puranmashi (Full Moon) | June 5, 2026 | Friday |
| 27 Jeth | Ganga Dussehra | June 10, 2026 | Wednesday |
| 29 Jeth | Nirjala Ekadashi | June 12, 2026 | Friday |
| 32 Jeth | Shaheedi Purab — Martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev Ji | June 15, 2026 | Monday |
💡 What is Sangrand? Sangrand marks the first day of every Desi month. In the Sikh tradition, the Gurdwara holds a special congregation, the Hukamnama is recited, and langar (community meal) is served. Many Punjabi households also follow the tradition of cooking khichdi (rice and lentils) on this day.
18 Jeth — A Special Local Tradition
In certain specific villages and rural areas of Pakistan, the 18th of Jeth holds deep cultural and spiritual significance. On this day, communities observe a local commemoration of the events of Karbala — a tradition rooted in the Punjabi solar calendar rather than the Islamic lunar month of Muharram.
📌 Important Note: This tradition is separate and distinct from the universally observed Ashura on the 10th of Muharram in the Islamic calendar. The 18 Jeth observance is a local solar-calendar custom practiced in specific rural communities of Pakistan, passed down through generations.
18 Jeth 2026 English Date: Monday, June 1, 2026
On this day, communities gather for majalis (mourning assemblies), noha (lamentation recitations), and collective remembrance of the martyrdom of Imam Hussain (A.S) and his companions at Karbala. In some households, niyaz (blessed food) and langar are also distributed.
This reflects a broader phenomenon within the Punjabi Desi calendar, where certain Islamic commemorations are also observed on solar calendar dates — for example, the 10th of Harh is observed similarly in some communities. This dual observance — lunar and solar — demonstrates how deeply intertwined Islamic spirituality and Punjabi agrarian culture have become across the centuries.
🌿 Cultural Context: According to the Punjabi calendar resource Grokipedia, Muslim observances in the Punjabi context adapt to the luni-solar calendar, with Karbala commemorated both per the Islamic lunar reckoning and again on the 10th of Harh and the 18th of Jeth in solar alignment, focusing on processions and mourning.
Jeth Weather & Farming Cycle
Jeth is the hottest month in Punjab. Daytime temperatures regularly reach 40°C to 48°C (104°F to 118°F). The days are at their longest, the nights are warm, and the loo — a hot, dry wind — blows relentlessly across the plains.
🌾 What Farmers Do in Jeth
- 1Complete wheat and barley threshing — any leftover harvest from Vaisakh is wrapped up in Jeth
- 2Irrigate and care for Kharif crops — cotton, maize, sugarcane, and pulses need regular water under the summer sun
- 3Spray pesticides on crops — especially cotton, which is highly vulnerable to pest attacks during this heat
- 4Prepare fields for the next crop — plowing and tilling to loosen the earth
- 5Water management — tube wells and canal irrigation systems work at full capacity to keep fields nourished
🥭 Mango Season: Jeth is the peak of mango season across Punjab. Varieties like Chaunsa, Anwar Ratol, and Dosehri ripen during this month — earning Jeth the nickname “the month of mangoes” in Punjabi folklore.
Religious & Cultural Significance
⚔️ Martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev Ji
Towards the end of Jeth, the Sikh community observes the Shaheedi Purab (Martyrdom Day) of Guru Arjan Dev Ji, the fifth Sikh Guru, who was martyred in Lahore in 1606 CE. Gurdwaras hold special prayers, kirtan (hymn-singing), and langar to honor his sacrifice. This is one of the most significant events in the Sikh calendar year.
🌊 Ganga Dussehra
Hindu communities celebrate Ganga Dussehra, the day the sacred River Ganga is believed to have descended from the heavens to earth. Devotees take holy dips in rivers and offer prayers, considering this a day of spiritual purification and blessing.
🙏 Nirjala Ekadashi
Nirjala Ekadashi is considered the most important of all Ekadashi fasts in the Hindu calendar. The word “Nirjala” literally means “without water” — devotees fast the entire day without consuming even a drop of water, despite the blazing Jeth heat. Observing this fast is believed to carry the merit of all twelve Ekadashi fasts combined.
📚 Official Reference: Public holidays in Pakistan, including those for Ashura (10th Muharram), are officially announced by the Federal Cabinet Division, Government of Pakistan. A formal notification is issued each year for the two-day Ashura holiday.
Chabeel — The Tradition of Selfless Service
One of the most heartwarming traditions of Jeth is the Chabeel — a Sikh practice of distributing free cold water, sharbat (sweet drink), and refreshments to passersby on the streets.
This tradition is practiced in memory of the martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev Ji and embodies the Sikh principle of sewa (selfless service). Rickshaw drivers, laborers, travelers, and anyone walking by receives a cold drink — no questions asked, no payment required.
💧 A Simple Act of Kindness: In Jeth, an old Punjabi tradition involves placing earthen clay pots (ghara) filled with water outside the home for birds and stray animals. This small act saves countless lives during the peak heat. It is a practice that costs almost nothing but reflects the deep compassion embedded in Punjabi culture.
Home & Health Tips for Jeth
Surviving Jeth requires smart preparation. Here are practical tips to stay safe and comfortable during the hottest month of the year:
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Stay Hydrated
Drink at least 8–10 glasses of water daily. Lemon water, lassi, and sharbat help prevent heatstroke
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Eat Light
Avoid heavy fried foods. Increase intake of fruits, yogurt, cucumber, and salads to keep your body cool
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Avoid Midday Sun
Stay indoors between 11 AM and 4 PM — this is peak loo time and heatstroke risk is highest
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Keep Home Cool
Ventilate early morning, draw curtains during the day, and use a clay pot (ghara) for naturally cooled drinking water
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: When does the Jeth month start and end in 2026?
Jeth 2026 begins on Friday, May 15, 2026 and ends on Monday, June 15, 2026. It belongs to Bikrami year 2082 and consists of 32 days — one of the longest months in the Desi calendar.
Q: What is the English date of 18 Jeth in 2026?
18 Jeth 2026 falls on Monday, June 1, 2026. This is the date on which specific villages and communities in Pakistan observe a local solar-calendar tradition of commemorating the events of Karbala.
Q: How many days are in the Jeth month according to the Punjabi calendar?
Jeth has 32 days. Along with Harh, it is one of only two months in the Bikrami calendar that contains 32 days. The remaining nine months have 30 days each, and Vaisakh has 31 days — totaling 365 days.
Q: What is Sangrand Jeth and when does it fall in 2026?
Sangrand Jeth is the first day of the Jeth month. In 2026, it falls on May 15. The Sikh community visits the Gurdwara on Sangrand for special prayers, the Hukamnama is read, and langar is distributed. It marks the official beginning of the new Desi month.
Q: What is the Bikrami calendar and when did it begin?
The Bikrami calendar is an ancient Indian solar calendar that began around 100 BC during the reign of Raja Bikram Ajit. It is also known as the Punjabi calendar, Desi calendar, and Jantri. It is widely used in both Pakistan and India by farming communities, Sikhs, and Hindus to determine crop seasons and religious dates.
Q: What crops are grown or harvested during Jeth?
During Jeth, the harvesting of wheat and barley is completed. At the same time, farmers begin preparing for Kharif crops — cotton, maize, rice, and sugarcane. Fields are plowed, irrigated, and pesticide treatments are applied to ready the land for the next growing season.
Conclusion — The Many Faces of Jeth
Jeth is far more than a hot month on the calendar. It is the heartbeat of Punjabi life — a time when farmers sweat in the fields, Sikh volunteers pour cold sharbat for strangers, local communities gather in remembrance of Karbala on the 18th, and nature offers the sweetness of mangoes as the season’s reward.
The Bikrami calendar is a living heritage that connects people to their seasons, their soil, and their spirituality. Every date in Jeth tells a story. Know these dates — and share them with the next generation.
Zohi is the content author and creator behind DesiTarikh.pk, a platform dedicated to providing accurate and easy-to-understand information about desi calendar months, Islamic dates, cultural events, and seasonal timelines of Pakistan and South Asia.
With a strong focus on simplicity and clarity, Zohi aims to help readers understand traditional and modern calendar systems in one place. The content is designed for students, researchers, bloggers, and everyday users who want quick and reliable date-related information without confusion.
Through DesiTarikh.pk, Zohi continues to document monthly calendars, important cultural events, and historical timing details in an organized and SEO-friendly format.