It is count data
The day of the year is a discrete variable with a categorical distribution.
In your case you could also consider it as count data because it describes the number of days that you count untill something (the monsoon) happens. That is different than the case where the day number has no ordered meaning. E.g. 'the day when somebody is born' does not relate to something like waiting time.
Count data, what does it help you?
I imagine that waiting time for monsoon does not allow you to use typical distributions for count data like Poisson or negative binomial. That is more the case when the counts are a sum of simple individual events where each individual has a simple distribution.
E.g. when each day you have an independent probability for monsoon onset, as if the onset is determined by rolling a dice. But that doesn't seem realistic to me.
Possibly there are models that do treat it in some way like that but more advanced (I guess the problem is uncertainty about the model and it is questionable whether this is gonna help you). For instance each day adds a random amount of change until some random trigger point is being reached (e.g. the distribution of waiting time for a sum of exponential distributed variables to surpass some level/value is related to a Poisson distribution).
Treat the sampled statistic as continuous
Anyway, you can treat it as a continuous variable. The underlying categorical distribution can be likely parameterized by a few variables (rather than many variables giving the frequency/probability for each 365 days), and something like the mean of the distribution might be a meaningfull variable, which could be estimated by the sample mean (and the sample mean is a discrete variable with such small steps that you could analyze it as a continuous variable, ie. neglect errors due to discontinuity)
Plotting a histogram of your data might help you to consider what type of analysis would be best. (possibly the mean is not so interesting but instead it is an increase in the variance or some other aspect)
Count data is a bit ambiguous and you can look at it in different ways.
- Counts can relate to aggregate data. E.g. when $X_i$ is a categorical distributed variable, where $i$ refers to various instances of that variable, then you can tabulate the several $X_i$ by counting how often a particular value occurs.
- Counts can also relate to an individual sampled value, where the value itself is a count, e.g. counting the number of days until something (the monsoon) happens.