A Waterfall
By Any Other Name
Sometimes you just want to get outdoors
and hike with your dog but other times you come to a park to
hike to a specific destination. For many canine hikers a waterfall
is often the highlight of a morning spent on the trail. And spring
is the tme of year when waterfall hunting is at its best with
full water flow from winter snow melts. With that in mind, here
is a quick primer to identify the hydrospectaculars you will
encounter charging down a mountainside:
Horsetail Falls:
This is a nearly vertical drop, often a slender ribbon of water
that maintains contact with the ground beneath.
Curtain Falls:
This is probably the most recognizable of the powerful waterfalls
- think Niagara Falls - that runs the width of the stream. To
qualify as a full-blown curtain-type falls the drop must be taller
than it is wide.
Segmented Falls:
Here the stream breaks into two or more separate streams before
tumbling over the edge, resulting in side-by-side falls.
Tiered Falls:
The falls here break up into multiple distinct drops in close
proximity to one another; often as the rivulets of water bounce
off rocks and craggy cliffs.
Cascade Falls:
Similar to the tiered falls but the drops are much smaller and
often the water travels along more of a horizontal flow than
a vertical drop.
Fan Falls:
These falls are recoGnized as a cascade that branches out as
it descends so that the base of the falls is much wider at the
bottom that the stream at the top.
Plunge Falls:
These falls are the opposite of a cascade as the water flows
over a ledge straight down, dramatically losing all contact with
the rock underneath. Also called a cataract, many times you can
walk on a trail behind a plunge falls.
Punchbowl Falls:
These impressive falls are created when the water pouring over
a ledge is pinched through a narrow pathway, resulting in the
water being forcefully expelled downward. The result is often
a memorable splashdown in a pool below. Also called a chute.
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