Baatara Gorge – the Waterfall that Drops into a Cave
Situated on the Lebanon Mountain Trail the abyss in to which the waterfall drops is also known as the Three Bridge Chasm. It gets this name because the journey in to the valley below takes in three naturally formed bridges, each rising above the one below.
The waterfall is at its peak when the winter snows begin to melt and the water cascades in to the chasm. Scientists in the eighties dyed the water and showed that it eventually came back in to daylight in the nearby village of Mgharet al-Ghaouaghir.
It must have been a day to remember for Henri Coiffait, the French bio-speleologist who discovered the Pothole in 1952. Strange that it took until the twentieth century to discover something that was within walking distance of the town of Tannourine and the little village of Balaa. Perhaps it was obscured from view - walking across the meadow towards it, one might not guess what was about to reveal itself. However, that very year the local potholing club explored the pothole, reaching the bottom. It was not, however, fully mapped until thirty years later.
There is nothing to mark the waterfall and the chasm except a sign post which very strictly instructs visitors not to go too close to the edge as they are slippy and a fall would lead to almost certain death. Likewise, walking on the middle bridge is prohibited as it would be in danger of collapse with the added weight of an unwary tourist.
The length of time that this remarkable geological site has left, before erosion does it work, is something that can only be guessed at. However, in the interim this outstanding waterfall and pothole is something which can be enjoyed by visitors to Lebanon.
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