Devil's Throat |
The sky was only just brightening as I walked into the national park, dark clouds lay ominously on the horizon and a light breeze caused me to shiver involuntarily. The damp bark chippings on the path bounced underfoot soaking up the sound from our footsteps and the murmurs from conversation escaped into the surrounding forest. As we walked a light hum could be heard, my first thought was machinery; a pump maybe. The purr increased to a deep growl, thunder, I searched overhead for the clouds that would surely be swirling towards us promising a storm. To my surprise the clouds were dissipating and rays of pale sunshine breaking through. Soon the trees thinned and eventually gave way to bubbling expanses of angry grey water. Traversing rickety iron gangplanks I continued towards the noise unsure what I would find, now completely isolated from terra firma. Haze rose in a column in the distance, a high pitched chirping of a thousand swallows now accompanied the roaring current; the cause of this immense commotion was abruptly revealed.
The walkway ended and I found myself staring into a watery abyss. A great chasm opened its jaws below my feet and gallons of water cascaded over the edge erupting in furious foam on the jagged rocks littering the mouth of the river beneath. The spray from the torrent soaked through my clothing while each droplet ignited with the now golden beams to cast dancing prisms of colour onto my skin. The birds swooped millimetres above our heads before diving downwards to cling to the slippery, damp walls of the gorge. Supposedly waterfalls are scientifically proven to make you happy. As the ions within the water are crushed against each other the negative charges are stripped away releasing their positive counterparts into the atmosphere. How could this scene fail to invigorate?
From the Devil’s Throat I descended into the yawning canyon and spent the day meandering along shady banks lined with leafy foliage, the waterfalls stretched for miles, spectacular from every angle. I had no time to enjoy the views from the Argentinian side but was more than satisfied with my lot, after all there’s always next time.
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