The monsoon brings a sigh of relief and gives life to flora and fauna on the earth. This video from Maharashtra’s Naneghat is proof of the claim. The video shows water from a fall between the two mountains going upwards rather than falling down. Naneghat is a mountain in the Western Ghats that lies between the Konkan coast and the town of Junnar in the Deccan plateau.

This alluring video was shared by Indian Forest Service (IFS) officer Susanta Nanda on Twitter. He captioned the video, “When the magnitude of wind speed is equal and opposite to the force of gravity, the waterfall is at its best during that stage in Naneghat of the western ghats range. The beauty of Monsoons.”

The viral video showed the mountains in a lush green cover and the clouds floating all around in the sky. This video also received 3.5 lakh views and over 16,000 likes on Twitter since its first share on Sunday by Nanda. Netizens were in awe seeing the site and beauty of the waterfalls. They were also startled to see the reverse flow of the waterfall that was caused by the wind accompanying the rainfall in Naneghat. The rain along with the wind has made the beautiful scene possible.

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This video is doing rounds all over the internet and people are mesmerized by this site. Many people took to the comments section in the video and left beautiful remarks.

A user commented, “I’ve visited this place, Heaven, on earth.” Another person offered a scientific explanation of the phenomenon and said, “Newton’s first law of motion says that an object remains in the same state of motion unless acted upon by a force. Huge winds act on this water’s natural propensity to follow gravity. The magnitudes of the two forces are equal, and their directions are opposite.”

A Twitter user also explained the reverse effect by giving another scientific explanation, “Wind speed & force due to gravity are heterogeneous dimensionally & hence can’t be compared. It’d be rather, the force of wind due to its kinetic energy cancels out the weight (another force) of falling water.”