Yellow Branch Falls

Yellow Branch Falls seemed to be almost like a virtual twin to Issaqueena Falls as they both possessed similar character and they were also similar in height (I believe this one is said to be 40…

King Creek Falls

King Creek Falls is a nice 60-70ft waterfall (though I did see someone else say it was 75ft) with a satisfying flow and shape that made us wish we had brought a tripod (we ended up having to hold…

Minnehaha Falls

Minnehaha Falls was Julie’s favorite waterfall in Georgia as it possessed what Julie described as “having character.” It cascaded over a series of steps surrounded by beautiful and contrasting…

Amicalola Falls

Amicalola Falls is said to be the tallest waterfall in the state of Georgia (and proclaimed to be the tallest waterfall east of the Mississippi River) at a cumulative drop of about 729ft…

Anna Ruby Falls

Anna Ruby Falls was perhaps the largest of the waterfalls we saw in Georgia when we considered the sum of its parts. The falls consisted of a confluence of two waterfalls (a twin waterfall…

Toccoa Falls

Toccoa Falls is a pretty 186ft plunging waterfall nestled deep within the Toccoa Falls campus. Julie particularly liked this waterfall as it had a classical long rectangular shape as well as pretty…

Cascades du Herisson (“Herisson Waterfalls”)

Les Cascades du Herisson was perhaps the one waterfall excursion in France that made us see waterfalls in our sleep! That was because the Herisson Valley harbored at least seven…

Cascade de Flumen

Cascade de Flumen was the last waterfall we visited on our 2012 France trip, and it was certainly one of the more obscure ones because it probably wouldn’t have had an obvious trail…

Saut du Doubs

Saut du Doubs was a waterfall we went a little out of our way for. The reason for such effort was that this waterfall happened to be a rare transnational waterfall…

Cascade d’Arpenaz

Cascade d’Arpenaz was a pretty easy and straightforward waterfall for us to see and visit as it was easily seen off the A40 autoroute. It was certainly one of…

Cascade de Berard

Cascade de Berard was the lone waterfall on our France trip where we didn’t get to see it properly after hiking to it. That was because access to the viewpoint…

Cascade d’Angon

Cascade d’Angon provided us the perfect waterfalling excuse for enjoying what we think was one of France’s “hidden” gems – the charming canal town of Old Annecy…

Cascade de Seythenex

Cascade de Seythenex provided us another waterfalling excuse to explore around the outskirts of the Lake Annecy area. What made this impressive 45m waterfall different was…

Cascade de Glandieu

Cascade de Glandieu was probably one of Julie’s favorite waterfalls in France. It had what she likes to call “character” because its underlying wall had both texture and color…

Saut de La Pucelle

The Saut de La Pucelle (which I believe translates as “the leap of the Virgin” or “the Virgin’s leap”) was the lone waterfall attraction that we were able to fit in during…

Sillans La Cascade

Sillans La Cascade is the name of both the pleasant double-barreled waterfall as well as the town just upstream from it. Technically, both the waterfall and town…

Cascade de Courmes

Cascade de Courmes was the waterfall attraction we sought out in the Gorge du Loup. It’s an impressively colorful and tall free-falling waterfall that was scattering…

Saut du Loup

Saut du Loup is nothing grand, but it is an intriguing stop driving through the rugged Loup Gorge. Visiting this waterfall was pretty much a piece…

Cascade d’Ars

Cascade d’Ars (or the Ars Waterfall) was certainly one of the few waterfalls we had to physically work for in while in France. This waterfall was both impressive and memorable probably…

Cascade de Gavarnie (“Gavarnie Falls”)

La Cascade de Gavarnie is certainly one of the more well-documented waterfalls in France. It sits in a glacial cirque, resulting in what we believe has to be one of the most beautiful locales…