Bhutan
Bhutan is a small landlocked country in south-central Asia, sometimes called "Switzerland of Asia" due to it's landlocked and mountainous nature, bordered by India on it's southern and eastern sides and China to the North. The southern border is where the valley river plain of India starts and off in the northern half of the country are the famous Himalayas. While not as high as their Nepalese neighbors (that's right Everest, hog all the glory why don't you?), many peaks crack the 23,000 foot level, with Kula Kangri topping them out at a whopping 24,780 feet. Naturally, the climate in these extreme mountain ranges is one of nasty winter blizzards with perpetual snow cover, which is partly the source of the country's name, which translates to "Land of the Thunder Dragon". A bit further south in the country's midsection the climate changes over to a cool, temperate variety with average rainfall of roughly 40". The southern portion of the country sees a hot, humid climate with average temperatures often pushing into the 90s during the summer in the southern valleys. Given the monsoons that push into the region from June through September, some locations have reported annual rainfall of an incredible 200-300 inches! Certainly a nation of extremes given it's relatively small size of around 14,800 square miles, which is slightly larger than Maryland.
Bhutan's Meteorological and Hydrological services are headed by the Council for Renewable Natural Resources Research, but sadly doesn't appear to have an active website.