There are thousands of waterfalls in Yosemite National Park, but perhaps none are as well known as Bridalveil Fall. First things first: Don"t call it "falls" because then someone may think you were in Utah where another waterfall bears the surprisingly similar name, Bridal Veil Falls. Bridalveil, as seen in the photo, is often the first waterfall visitors to Yosemite encounter. It plunges 617 feet and flows year-round, fed with water from Ostrander Lake nearly 10 miles away. When the flow is light, brisk winds blow the water sideways. That"s why the Ahwahneechee Native Americans, who have lived in the Yosemite Valley for centuries, traditionally called the waterfall Pohono, or "Spirit of the Puffing Wind."
Yosemite National Park turns 132
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Infrared Jupiter, erupting Io
-
Cue up the tango music
-
2022 FIFA World Cup
-
Thomas Jefferson Memorial, Washington, DC
-
Remembering the Arizona
-
Camels in the desert, United Arab Emirates
-
The circular castle of Cornwall
-
International Sloth Day
-
Saffron in bloom
-
Trevi Fountain, Rome, Italy
-
Jane’s Carousel delights
-
3,000 years of history
-
AAPI Heritage Month & Lei Day
-
The last thing seen by Wile E. Coyote
-
Yabba-Dabba-Doo!
-
A Eurasian lynx in Siberia
-
Manatee Awareness Month
-
Belize Barrier Reef
-
Asteroid Day
-
Milford Sound/Piopiotahi rainforest in New Zealand
-
Ocean City, Maryland, at sunrise
-
A ‘circus of chaos’ for Stravinsky
-
World Giraffe Day
-
Make your way up a picturesque passageway of Chefchaouen
-
World Laughter Day—it s a hoot
-
Manhattan
-
League of Nations, 100 years later
-
Yosemite National Park, California
-
Of balloons and lost pantaloons
-
Union Square, Manhattan
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

