"It literally looked like lava" was one person's reaction after seeing the famed firefall in Yosemite National Park, and the ingredients are coming together for another spectacular show by Mother ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Feb. 28 (UPI) --Visitors to Yosemite National Park in California were treated to a rare phenomenon when the reflection of the sun ...
A spectacular "firefall" wowed nature-watchers in California's Yosemite National Park on Wednesday, with the setting sun lighting up a waterfall like a ribbon of fire. For a couple of weeks every year ...
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (KRON) — The “Firefall” in Yosemite National Park is one of Mother Nature’s most beautiful and elusive spectacles. For just a few days in February, the sun sets at the ...
A natural spectacle called "firefall" happens each February in California's Yosemite National Park when light from the setting sun strikes the park's Horsetail Falls, making it look like it's ablaze ...
Yosemite National Park won’t require reservations in 2026 for visitors hoping to see one of its most famous natural spectacles. For the last three years, the popular California park has required ...
For a few weeks every February, Yosemite National Park experiences a phenomenon that creates the illusion of a waterfall of flames. Dubbed the firefall, it takes place on the park's eastern side at El ...
It’s that time of year, once again. Yosemite National Park’s famous natural phenomenon, the Firefall, will once again be making an appearance. Visitors can catch the firefall from mid-to-late February ...
"Firefall" occurs when the sun is setting as beams of sunlight shine down on Horsetail Fall at a particular angle. As it does, the water shines bright and looks like a river of molten lava from a ...
Each year in mid-February, Horsetail Falls transforms into a unique spectacle when the waterfall is backlit by the sunset. In the winter light, the waterfall glows bright orange as through it was on ...