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Storms, Legends, and Living Bridges: The Untold Stories of India’s Rain Kingdom


Updated: April 19, 2025 10:40

Image Source: Hotel Polo Towers
Consider waking up to the rain almost daily—a common experience for people of Sohra (earlier known as Cherrapunjee) in India's Meghalaya state, the world's wettest town. It rains an average of 11.43 meters every year here, which is 22 times more than London, which gets approximately 1,020 mm of rain annually and around 164 rainy days. In Sohra, the monsoon veils the landscape in a dramatic spectacle of rumbling waterfalls, foggy cliffs, and emerald green forests, yet it imposes special challenges and astonishing adaptations as well.
 
Important Features:
 
Rain as Life: The Khasi inhabitants of Sohra have perfected the art of living with the deluge. Clever living root bridges, made from rubber tree roots, endure the incessant rain and offer lifeline connections between streams. Locals use traditional "knup" rain shields fashioned from bamboo and grass, as umbrellas are ineffective against the strong winds.
 
Severe Weather: Torrential rains can persist for weeks during the May–September monsoon, inundating houses and scouring away topsoil. In 1861, Sohra received a world record 26.46 meters of rain in one year, sufficient to engulf the Statue of Liberty waist-deep.
 
A Town of Contrasts: In the rain, water shortage is usual in winter, and families are forced to haul water from faraway tanks. The contradiction of excess and scarcity defines the daily lives and resilience of communities.
 
Tourism and Legacy: The rain-kissed beauty of Sohra attracts tourists, but changes in rainfall patterns endanger its iconic waterfalls and lifestyle, making adaptation and innovation more important than ever.
 
Rain is not simply weather in Sohra—it's fate, culture, and existence.
 
Sources: BBC Travel, Statista

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