Trou de Fer Gorge in The Island of Reunion
Trou de Fer is one of the most spectacular sights of La
Reunion, a French island lying some 650 km off Madagascar's east coast,
close to Mauritius. It’s a gorge about a thousand feet deep between two
cirques at the bottom of which flows the Bras de Caverne River.
The
canyon has two distinct parts - a large crater, which is fed by six
prominent waterfalls, and a narrow slot canyon at its outlet, which
constitutes most of the canyon's length. The Bras de Caverne River's
headwaters are in a cirque high on the mountainside abutting the canyon
wall, and directly after that, it drops over a waterfall about 700 feet
(210 m) high. This drop is usually dry or has very little water but
between that and the next, 600-foot (180 m) drop, springs feed the
river, which drops over this then drops over a final 1,000-foot (300 m)
undercut cliff into the Trou de Fer in a narrow plume of water.
Over
a distance of about 3.5km the river Bras de Caverne plunges down almost
930 meter over these three dramatic waterfalls and then winds its way
along the narrow canyon till it joins the Riviere du Mat on its way to
the Indian Ocean.
Trou
de Fer was discovered only in 1989, and since then a considerable
number of adventure sports enthusiasts, specially in France, have taken
up canyonning, and in recent years has become something of a challenging
destination for them.
Because of gorges like Trou de Fer
created from volcanic fractures access to the center of the island of
Réunion is difficult. This has protected the island’s center from human
encroachment, and its tropical forests, with giant heather, ferns, and
lichens, have been preserved. Forests at low altitude, however, have
been converted to agricultural or urban use and have disappeared. More
than 30 species of animals and plants, of which about two-thirds were
endemic, have become extinct on the island in the past 400 years. The
destruction of the forest and the introduction of non-native species
have a serious impact on these insular ecosystems, whose balance has
been created without outside influences. On the island, the dodo became
extinct shortly after the arrival of Western sailors, who brought cats,
rats, and pigs with them.