Ilathumbile-mazha-5

– In the folklore and indigenous farming calendars of the Western Ghats, the term "Ilathumbile Mazha" (Rain at the Leaf’s Tip) refers to an ultra-fine, mist-like precipitation that appears not as falling drops but as tiny condensations collecting at the tip of forest leaves. The fifth manifestation of this phenomenon, locally logged as " Ilathumbile-Mazha-5 ", was observed this week across high-altitude shola forests. What is ‘Ilathumbile Mazha’? Unlike conventional rain driven by monsoon winds, Ilathumbile Mazha occurs during inter-monsoonal dry spells. Cold air draining from upper slopes meets rising warm, moist air from valleys. Condensation forms directly on leaf apices, especially of melastoma and wild rhododendron. Drops coalesce until heavy enough to fall – often only a few hundred per square meter.