Top ten amazing natural pools

Top ten amazing natural pools

1. Little River Canyon, Alabama
In the warm gorge east of the Mississippi River is the small River, which plunges into the canyon and then meanders through it for 12 miles, present up a number of gorgeous swimming holes that are well-liked with locals in the heat of summer. Swimmers jump off sandstone rocks keen on the water both at the bottom of the falls and an area on the canyon flooring known as ‘Hippie Hole’.



‘Hippie Hole’
2. Giola, Thomas, Greece

This is a beautiful natural pond with perfect water and resembles a swimming pool carved into rocks. If you are visiting Athens make sure to stop by the Island of Thasos and knowledge this amazing lagoon for manually. Check out photos for a better “view”.


3. Ik Kil, Cenote, Mexico
This is to be found in the Eco-archeological Park Ik Kil, just 3 km from Chichén Itzá and Piste. Called the “Sacred Blue Cenote,” it is a perfectly round well-type cenote with exuberant vegetation and waterfalls. This is another ideal place for swimming in the clear blue water. 196 feet wide and about 130 feet deep, it is an open cenote about 85 feet from the surface.



4. Havasu Falls, Supai, Arizona
This is absolutely an oasis in the desert, and if you were lost sufficient to trip upon it and think it were a mirage, you’d have well earned a dip in the aqua waters of Arizona’s Havasu Falls. Situated on the Havasupai Indian condition just south of the Grand Canyon National Park, Havasu Falls is only nearby by helicopter or a ten-mile hike attended by pack mules. Havasu Creek is fed by a spring, so the water leftovers at a stable level and are 70 degrees year-round.

5. Ginnie Springs, Florida
Gorgeously clear, delectably cold and full of vast undersea cave systems, Ginnie Springs is one of the most visually stunning natural swimming spots in Florida. Found in a privately-owned park the length of the Santa Fe River in the town of High Springs, this set of seven springs offers activities like tubing, snorkeling, scuba diving and cave diving. Jacques Cousteau allegedly called the water deep in the springs the clearest in the world. This spot is definitely active with visitors almost year-round, and it’s easy to see why.


6. Fairy Pools, Scotland

A pleasant sequence of splash-pools and gullies in the waterfalls on Allt Coir a’ Mhadaith, Coire na Creiche, Glen brittle, in the Cuillin hills. You will need walking boots and an afternoon to spare in order to reach these pools; but what better way to cool down on a hot day’s hike? Take your swimming suit along; you may just be in luck.

7. Tat Kuang Si Waterfall, Luang Prabang, Laos
Clear and delightfully blue-green, the waters of the Tat Kuang Si Waterfall in Luang Prabang, Laos are tempting, particularly in the Laotian heat. You can either swim at the base or go up to the top and lounge in a swimming gap between tiers of the falls. The Tat Kuant Si Waterfall is situated in a national park along the Mekong River.


8. Sliding Rock, Brevard, North Carolina
Every summer, there are large number of visitor in Sliding rock, where located one of most good-looking is and unique natural mountain waterfall. It is located in Pisgah National Forest Close to Asheville NC, where people came to slip and slide on this stunning 60-foot mountain slider. Even water is pretty cold, visitors wait patiently for their turn and slide one-by-one. At the end of the slide they make splash into the big eight-foot deep pool, swim couple feet to get into shore and get back in the line for one more slide…


9. Blue Lagoon Resort in Grindavík, Iceland.

This one is a little more profitable. But spectacular nonetheless. The water’s temperature is 37-39°C / 98-102°F. The lagoon holds six million liters of geothermal seawater, which is rehabilitated every 40 hours. usual sampling shows that “common” bacteria do not thrive in this ecosystem, thus added cleansers such as chlorine are not needed.


10. Devil’s Pool, Victoria Falls, Zambia
Is the Devil’s Pool the most unsafe pool in the world? Some say yes, bearing in mind that it lies on the edge of Victoria Falls – and if you by chance went over the side, there would be a long 360-foot drop before you reached the rocky base of the falls. That doesn’t stop people from swimming there – or parents from bringing their young children to catch a glimpse of the view from the cool waters. The images are so fantastic; people tend to think they’re faked. Swimming is only possible from September to December, when the river is low enough not to sweep people right over the falls, but at least one person does die every year.



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