At 171m, this is the third highest fall in Sri Lanka. The torrent of  water cascades down to the Koslande Plateau and during rain it is a  spectacular sight. Sadly, this enchanting fall visible from the Koslande  highway may disappear due to frequent landslides. On one side of the  fall the land is covered in deciduous plants. Wildlife found in the area  include lizards.
The fall is steeped in folklore. One story tells of how a king had  fallen in love with a young woman belonging to a lower caste. This  affair enraged the king's subjects so the lovers decided to flee.  Arriving at the site of the fall, they began climbing upwards. The king  made it to the top but the creeper the woman was hanging onto became  entangled in rocks and she plunged to her death. It is said that the  tears shed by the king in his grief were collected by a deity and turned  into the fall as it stands today. RL Brohier, a scientist and historian  from the UK who served in the Surveyor General's Department, kept  records detailing his intimate knowledge of Sri Lanka and its  inhabitants. Amongst them was a story concerning Diyaluma Falls, which  is said to have been Brohier's favorite fall. It is a tragic story  dating from 1910, which local village elders still remember. Two  tourists, Harris and Ashna decided to climb up the fall but it was Ashna  who made it to the top first and began to descend again.
 With a crowd that had gathered below watching the proceedings,  Harris's pride was injured. Unwilling to lose faith, he produced a knife  and severed the rope, plunging Ashna to her death. He then cut his own  rope and fell, their cries mingling with the sound of rushing water. The  shattered bodies of the pair were unrecognizable and their blood turned  the water red.
The fall is located along the Koslande - Welawaya road in the Badulla  District. Koslanda is the nearest town to the fall, 6km away, and  Welawaya is 13km away.



