Photo: Hardik Joshi · Wikimedia Commons
For nine or ten months of the year, the streams of south Gujarat and the Dangs are little more than dry channels of rock. Then the monsoon arrives, usually by the second week of June, and the whole region changes character. Within a few weeks of steady rain the hills are running with water, and falls that did not exist in May are thundering off the ledges. I spend a couple of weekends every wet season chasing them, and it has become the part of the year I look forward to most.
This is not a landscape of one famous waterfall. It is a scatter of them across the Dang, Tapi and Valsad districts, some signposted and busy, others known mostly to locals and a few determined outsiders. The rewards are real and so are the risks, because monsoon water is fast, cold and unpredictable. What follows is where I go, when they actually run, and how I try to come home in one piece each time.
Gira waterfall, near Waghai in the Dangs, is the crowd favourite and for good reason. In full flow it drops in a broad curtain that you can see and hear from the viewing area, and after really heavy rain it turns the colour of milky tea. It is easy to reach, which means it gets busy on weekends, so I go early. Shankar waterfall, up toward Dharampur in Valsad, is my quieter pick, a proper fall tucked into forest that rewards a short walk in.
Zarwani falls, inside the Shoolpaneshwar sanctuary near Kevadia, is a gentler, tiered set of cascades that suits a family outing more than the big single drops. There are dozens of smaller unnamed falls along the ghat roads where a stream simply meets a cliff, and honestly some of my best afternoons have been at those, pulled over on the roadside with nobody else around. Ask locally after a heavy spell; the good ones change year to year.

Shankar waterfall in full flow after a heavy spell of monsoon rain in south Gujarat.
Timing is everything. These falls are a July to September proposition, at their fullest a day or two after a big downpour. Go too early in June and you get a trickle; go in October and many have already thinned out. The catch is that the same rain that fills them makes the approach roads slick and, in the worst spells, floods the low crossings. I check the forecast and local news for the Dangs before committing, and I keep the plan flexible.
The best falls run a day after the heaviest rain, which is also the most dangerous time to stand near them.
Most of these involve a short trek from a parking spot, anything from a five-minute scramble to a half-hour walk on rough ground. The rock is slick with algae and spray, so proper grippy shoes matter more than anything else you pack. Combine a couple of falls with a base at Saputara or Dharampur and you have a full weekend; the hill station gives you a comfortable bed and the surrounding hills give you the water.
I will not soften this part. People drown at monsoon waterfalls in Gujarat every year, almost always because they climbed onto wet rock above a drop or waded into a pool where the current was stronger than it looked. My rules are simple and I do not break them: stay behind barriers where they exist, never turn my back on flowing water, and never enter a pool after fresh heavy rain when the flow can surge without warning. Flash rises are real. If a stream is rising or the water is muddy and loud, I admire it from a distance and leave the swimming for a calmer day.
Monsoon in the Dangs is loud, wet and gloriously green, and the waterfalls are the reason I keep going back with muddy shoes and a damp bag. Treat them with respect and they give you some of the best hours you will spend in Gujarat all year, standing in the spray with the hills roaring around you. Rush them, or ignore the water’s warnings, and they can turn on you fast. Go in the right months, keep your footing, and let the rain do the rest.
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