About Nuranang Falls (Jang Falls)
Nuranang Falls — also called Jang Falls — is one of northeast India's most spectacular waterfalls, plunging 100 metres through a narrow cleft in the Arunachal Himalaya on the road to Tawang. The waterfall was named after Nura, a young woman from the Monpa community whose story of unrequited love for an Indian soldier during the 1962 war became a widely told regional legend, adding emotional resonance to one of the region's most visited natural landmarks.
The falls are powered by the glacial Nuranang River as it drops from the high meadows near the Sela Pass into the Tawang Valley — the volume is extraordinary in late summer, when the combined snowmelt and monsoon send a tremendous column of water crashing through the gorge. The surrounding forest, part of the eastern Himalayan biodiversity hotspot, is rich in birds including several hornbill species, and the Tawang Valley above is one of the last intact Monpa tribal cultural landscapes in India.
September–November for maximum flow and clear Himalayan visibility.
The road bridge above gives a dramatic aerial view; the track below the road reaches spray distance for intimate shots.