VICTORIA FALLS, ZIMBABWE | "Mosi-oa-Tunya — The Smoke That Thunders"
Victoria Falls is the largest waterfall on earth — a curtain of white water one mile wide and twice the height of Niagara, where the Zambezi River drops 108 meters into a narrow basalt gorge and sends a permanent column of mist visible from fifty kilometers away. The local Kololo people called it Mosi-oa-Tunya, the Smoke that Thunders, and the name is more accurate than any photograph. The falls sit on the border of Zimbabwe and Zambia in the heart of southern Africa, surrounded by a spray forest of ferns, ebony, and wild fig trees that exist only because of the perpetual mist. At full flood in April and May, over five hundred million liters of water per minute pour over the edge. At low water in October and November, the individual falls separate and the gorge below becomes visible in full, striated by centuries of basalt erosion into one of the most dramatic geological formations in the world.
The colors are specific and extraordinary: the deep jade-green of the Zambezi above the lip, the white of the falling curtain, the spray-forest emerald on both rims, and the warm terracotta of the basalt gorge walls — a palette that exists nowhere else on the African continent and that changes entirely between flood season and low water.