Answer:
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Explanation:
The force of Iguazu Falls is omnipresent. It’s in the air, misty air that drenches my face, my hair, my clothes. It’s in the sound, the thundering drum roll of falling water that blocks out nearly all else. And of course it’s in the momentous curtains of water that bucket down over rocky edges, full speed ahead, forming a swift river that ribbons onward and leaps into the vast canyon below.
The power of Iguazu Falls is all encompassing. I feel this deeply standing on a concrete platform in Brazil surrounded by dozens of falls. Across the canyon ancient and mystic landscapes sit surrounded by thick mist.
Magic of Iguazu
To call Iguazu Falls the best waterfall in the world is to do it injustice. It’s not merely a waterfall but a system of waterfalls, the largest in the world with more than 275 separate falls in total that span the border of Argentina and Brazil.
Iguazu
“How can you be here and not know there is a greater power in the universe,” I ask aloud.
I am not alone. I am brushed up against a railing staring down over a cascade next to Luam, a Brazilian girl with bright red lips and a shaved head. Her one earing – a feather – dances violently, moved by the power of the falls.
I sat next to Luam on the bus that takes visitors from the park’s entrance to the start of the falls and I’ve been trailing her ever since as we’ve hiked through the park separately, inevitably meeting at the lookout points and stops along the path.
Iguazu Falls
We are at the end of a platform, the closest visitors can get to the falls on foot (to get closer you’d have to go by boat), and here at this railing we meet again.
“I know,” she responds, slow and pensive. “Being here I feel so much. I don’t even have words. I am so moved.”