What do you do with at a place that has only one season? Cherrapunji the land of perpetual monsoons has the same scenery of mist , clouds, fog and the rain-washed hills no matter what time of the year you arrive here. It has already begun to rain in Shillong when I take the undulating road to Cherrapunji approx. 60 kilometers away. Thankfully by the time I reach Cherrapunji the rain has spent itself and is reduced to occasional busts of drizzle.
Apr 28, 2011 | Categories: Travelogues | Tags: caves in cherrapunji, cherrapunji, cherrapunji wettest place on earth, documentary photographer india, highest rainfall in the world, indian countryside, indian photographers, khasi hills meghalaya, khasi people, meghalaya landscape photographs, meghalaya state, north east India, north east India photographs, north eastern states of India, people of north east, photographer in India, photographers in delhi, photographs of north east India, photojournalist india, rural indian in north east, seven north east states of India, sohra meghalaya, travel photographer in India, waterfalls in cherrapunji, waterfalls in india, wettest place on earth meghalaya | Leave A Comment »