Lake that disappears several times a year (Photo)

The lake, known as “Desappeering Tarn”, has excited travelers and photographers in Tasmania after being seen in a rare state these days. It is located about half a way to the mountaintop of Mt. Wellington, 161 feet tall. This is where most of the year is actually dry. View [...]
The view of the lake's water surface for most travelers was an unfulfilled wish, KosovoPress broadcasts.
The few who have caught the lake, especially through cameras, testify that the lake's water has an incredible blue color. This year, the scene is wonderful, they say, because no one remembers that so much water gathered in the lake, so in the deepest parts of the lake, it looks like a sapphire, the Kosovas broadcasts.
Such scenes can usually be encountered almost exclusively in the untouched nature of the coast of the unkempt tropical paradise. It's like an Olympic pool, and it's on the slopes.
The lake is so rare that even in Tasmania too, so far, they were skeptical about its existence, claiming it actually becomes a boy for a travel myth. The loss of the lake is due to severe drought and low rainfall as water disappears through the earth's hollows, and when it rains, it fills again.












