Drought, what drought? The Victoria Falls – which triumphantly straddles the borders of Zimbabwe and Zambia – have come roaring back to life in 2020, after an unforgiving summer threatened to leave the attraction high and dry. Footage captured this week shows the falls at their magnificent best.

Victoria Falls fights against drought – and wins

The Victoria Falls water levels were 11 centimetres below the ten year average as of October 2019 – just a few centimetres higher than the lowest level recorded in 1995. Standing at 355 feet high, the impressive landmark draws thousands of tourists each year and generates much-needed business to the area.

BEFORE: The UNESCO world heritage site had recorded the lowest levels in recent times due to a severe drought in Zimbabwe – 13 November, 2019, Photo by ZINYANGE AUNTONY / AFP

But the regional drought saw certain sections of the famous falls dry-up over the summer. Facing a catastrophe, recent flooding in Zambia had an inadvertently positive affect on the iconic feature – water has now gushed towards the jewel in Africa’s crown, causing beautiful scenes like these:

Watch water flowing over Victoria Falls here:

Victoria Falls has water again after the earth took some space from us. pic.twitter.com/uPMnv95Yob — zambian kadollie 🎀 (@_QueenEnjay) April 1, 2020

The Mosi-Oa-Tunya/Victoria Falls WHS. Modeling in its own unique style that man can not comprehend pic.twitter.com/lMxMMQGhvb — thumbikani (@thumbikani) April 2, 2020

Africa my home. Victoria Falls back to life. Nature reigning supreme. "No one dare challenge when I say I am An African" Africa will survive. 🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹 pic.twitter.com/XtC6JfFt8S — Sophie Mokoena (@Sophie_Mokoena) April 1, 2020

Superb improvements across the board

The Zambezi River Authority have released a statement this week, explaining the epic improvements seen by Victoria Falls. The levels haven’t just got back on track, but they’re now way above the seasonal average: