Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Kegon Falls

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Type
  
Plunge

Total width
  
7 metres (23 ft)

Height
  
97 m

Width
  
7 m

Total height
  
97 metres (318 ft)

Watercourse
  
Oshiri River

Number of drops
  
1

Phone
  
+81 288-55-0030

Kegon Falls

Location
  
Nikkō National Park, Tochigi Prefecture, Honshū, Japan

Address
  
Chugushi, Nikko, Tochigi Prefecture 321-1661, Japan

Similar
  
Lake Chūzenji, Nikkō Tōshō‑gū, Ryūzu Falls, Futarasan jinja, Rinnō‑ji

Kegon falls hd


Kegon Falls (華厳滝, Kegon Taki) is located at Lake Chūzenji (source of the Oshiri River) in Nikkō National Park near the city of Nikkō, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. The falls were formed when the Daiya River was rerouted by lava flows. The main falls had a height of approximately 97 metres (318 ft) and about twelve smaller waterfalls are situated behind and to the sides of Kegon Falls, leaking through the many cracks between the mountain and the lava flows.

Contents

In the autumn, the traffic on the road from Nikko to Chūzenji can sometimes slow to a crawl as visitors come to see the fall colors.

In 1927, the Kegon Falls was recognized as one of the "Eight Views" which best showed Japan and its culture in the Shōwa period. It is also listed as one of the "Japan’s Top 100 Waterfalls", in a listing published by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment in 1990.

The Kegon Falls are infamous for suicides, especially among Japanese youth.

Discovering nikko kegon falls lake chuzenji and yumoto onsen in early summer


SuicidesEdit

Misao Fujimura (1886 – May 22, 1903), a Japanese philosophy student and poet, is largely remembered due to his farewell poem written directly on the trunk of a tree before committing suicide by jumping from the Kegon Falls.

The story was soon sensationalized in contemporary newspapers and was commented upon by the famed writer Natsume Sōseki. This led the famed scenic falls to become a notorious spot for lovetorn or otherwise desperate youngsters to take their lives (Werther Effect).

References

Kegon Falls Wikipedia