The "rule" (Basic Daylight Exposure AKA sunny 16) is a close-enough guideline to get you started, and you are expected to have to adjust until you find out what is working for your conditions. It assumes EV 15 ambient light on a CLEAR and SUNNY day. This is '125 at f/16 using an ISO 100 film. Here in L.A., we don't really have sunny 16 conditions that often, although we tend to think that they are because it is all relative. Unless the day is truly clear, I use f/11 at '125 (or '100 usually, due to the shutter speeds on the cameras) as the baseline.
If you factor in that your shutter might be slightly off and that your developing will likely be a bit different from the film companies', you have even more reason to just shoot some and find out.
Sorry if this is a "bummer" answer. I really don't know about how to alter the rule for different parts of the world. I would just shoot a roll using BDE guidelines and see what happens!
P.S. As Ari just mentioned below, you might find it informative to use a light meter at first, and IMO this is mostly to figure out the pluses or minuses off of BDE for open shade, full shade, cloudy bright, hazy, etc. If it is a reflected meter, I don't think it will help you much unless you also bring a grey card. I recommend a dedicated incident meter, or a reflected meter with a little white bubble, so you measure the over all average level of light, instead of the light reflected off of stuff in the general area of your composition, with the assumption that you want everything to average to a middle grey.
To get a decent meter on the way cheap, look for Brockway meters. They are older versions of Sekonic Studio incident meters that go for next to nothing on E-Bay. They require no batteries, and mine works just fine alongside my spot meter. Gives me the same or within 1/3 stop of my spot meter reading off a grey card. It came with a case, the flat white disc, the dome, the grid, and three slides for $4.99 plus shipping, for a total of 11 or 12 bucks. My model is the "Norwood Director", though there may be others that are similar.