Archives: Waterfalls
Simpson Falls
Simpson Falls is a series of seasonal cascades beneath a bridge on West Ithaca Creek on the northeast slope of Mt Coot-tha requiring a workout to experience.
Twin Falls
Twin Falls in Springbook National Park offered hidden waterfalls, a surprise rock cave, and the ability to go behind its namesake dual drop all in one hike.
Curtis Falls
Curtis Falls is a 10-12m waterfall that stood out mostly because it is known to be one of the few natural waterfalls that harbour a wild glow worm colony.
Kondalilla Falls
Kondalilla Falls is perhaps the most impressive waterfall in the Sunshine Coast Hinterland where Skene Creep drops a reported 80-90m in the Blackall Range.
Rainbow Falls and Rockpools
Rainbow Falls is a series of waterfalls with clear swimming potholes deep in the remote Blackdown Tablelands National Park in Queensland’s Central Highlands
Wheel of Fire Falls
Wheel of Fire Falls is a twisting cascade concealing itself to all but the most adventurous hikers willing to cross creeks and do a dicey scramble or swim.
Mena Creek Falls
Mena Creek Falls was an impressively thick waterfall on the nameake Mena Creek, which is can be visited from a public lookout as well as a private park.
Serendipity Falls
Serendipity Falls is diminutive and ephemeral, worthy of being a pullover distraction, especially if caught behind slow vehicles on the Palmerston Highway.
Emerald Creek Falls
Emerald Creek Falls was an attractive series of cascades with an overlook and swimming hole just outside the boundary of Dinden National Park near Mareeba.
Davies Creek Falls
Davies Creek Falls is an impressive series of steep cascades in Dinden National Park near Cairns featuring lookouts, swimming holes, and a picnic area.
Blahmantung Waterfall (Air Terjun Blahmantung)
Blahmantung Waterfall is said to be one of Bali’s tallest waterfalls, but we remember it most for the adventure caused by sifting through misinformation.
Blahmaning Waterfall (Air Terjun Blahmaning)
The Blahmaning Waterfall was one we had mistaken for the Blahmantung Waterfall (thanks to crowdsourcing on GoogleMaps), but was pleasant in its own right.
Sekumpul Waterfall (and Hidden Waterfall)
The Sekumpul Waterfall could very well be the best waterfall in Bali with multiple segments dropping a reported 80m making it one of the island’s largest.
Aling Aling Waterfall (Air Terjun Aling Aling)
Aling Aling Waterfall is the largest of four waterfalls in the same excursion, but it’s this main falls that drew us to the excursion in the first place.
Fiji Waterfall
The Fiji Waterfall was close to the Sekumpul Waterfall, but it really surprised us, especially considering how small it looked when we first noticed it.
Banyu Wana Amertha Waterfall
The Banyu Wana Amertha Waterfall is actually a series of four waterfalls in one excursion on streams downslope of the Danau Buyan Lake likely draining it.
Banyumala Twin Waterfalls
The Banyumama Twin Waterfall is actually a convergence of multiple springs in addition to the namesake tall twin pair. So photos don’t do this place justice.
Munduk Waterfalls (Golden Valley Waterfall and Red Coral Waterfall)
The Munduk Waterfalls are a series of at least four sizable falls – Golden Valley, Red Coral Waterfall, Labuhan Kebo, and Melanting – all doable in one hike.
Leke Leke Waterfall (Air Terjun Leke Leke)
The once obscure Leke Leke Waterfall has been becoming popular in recent years as it featured a tall attractive drop with a cave-like overhang at its base.
Nungnung Waterfall (Air Terjun Nungnung)
Nungnung Waterfall is an unusually tall, gushing waterfall making it one of our favorites in Bali. However, we had go on a steep, slippery upside-down hike.