of the Horsetail Falls,
'fire waterfall', when I watched The Cain Mutiny, so many years ago, but unlike the film the photograph above was taken by Ken
Xu/Flickr is of the real event, not a shower of sparks as was used in the film, every
year, from December to April, water from melting mountain snow flows toward the
eastern edge of El Capitan, forming the temporary Horsetail Falls, it is best viewed
for a few days (7 -10) in February, when, under the right conditions, it turns
into a firefall, with the water looking like flowing lava and swirling flames,
sadly, many of the people who travel to Yosemite to witness the firefall
firsthand don’t know that it doesn’t appear every year, for the Yosemite
Firefall to be visible, certain conditions have to be met all at once, which
do not happen every year,
the natural show must be truly spectacular as the above video shows,
and for a longer explanation the above video does a good job, but what conditions need to be in place for the show? well, there must be snow in Yosemite, and the temperature must be
high enough to make the snow melt and create the waterfall. For example, when
California experiences drought, the waterfalls don’t flow, so Horsetail Falls
can’t turn into a firefall, but those aren’t the only conditions that have to
be met. The sky has to be almost perfectly clear, as even the slightest haze
can hinder the phenomenon, and the sun has to hit the falls from just the right
angle to “set the waterfall ablaze”, it many not happen every year, but when it does, what a show!
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