In the small village of Dinoša, located in the southeast of Montenegro, a small country on the Adriatic coast, there is an ancient mulberry tree famous throughout the region for a very special phenomenon. Every time it rains heavily, the tree trunk turns into a fountain. Water flows continuously in a large stream like a waterfall pouring from the middle of the tree trunk.

This amazing phenomenon has attracted the attention of many tourists for many years, but no one is sure of a reasonable explanation.
We all understand that water cannot flow from a living tree. But this happened to an ancient mulberry tree hundreds of years old in the village of Dinoša.

“That rare scene has been happening for the past 20 to 25 years, maybe even longer ,” a local resident named Emir Hakramaj told the media. “This tree is over 100 years old, maybe even 150 years old.”
According to Unusual Places , local people do not have mystical stories or folk superstitions surrounding this amazing phenomenon, but they believe in scientific answers.

The image of an ancient mulberry tree pouring out water like a waterfall.
Among them, there is a hypothesis that most people agree with, that the ancient mulberry tree is surrounded by a grassland, with countless underground water sources.
Due to its age, the sturdy trunk of the tree has been hollowed out. And that is the cause of this miraculous phenomenon. After every heavy rain, the surrounding groundwater is flooded, so the water below is pushed up the tree trunk and out into a large cavity.
This exquisite scene makes the ancient mulberry tree look like a temporary fountain, providing a special sight that leaves visitors in awe.
The phenomenon of tree trunks spraying water is very strange, but it is not the only example of water erupting from the ground after rain.
According to Amusing Planet , in the village of Tuhala in Estonia, a well is also capable of spewing water after heavy rain.



This well happened to be located right on an underground river. After rainwater enters the river, the water pressure increases, to the point where it can spray out of the well, sometimes up to half a meter. This phenomenon lasts for several days. During this time, more than 100 liters of water are sprayed every second.
Local legend has it that the witches of Tuhala gathered in the underground sauna and fought with birch trees, causing water to spill on the surface. They called it the Witch’s Well.