Čedca Waterfall was a proud symbol of Jezersko until May 2008 and, at least officially, the champion among Slovenian waterfalls. The ever-decreasing accumulation of snow, which fed the snowmelt falling as a 138-meter waterfall into the Makekova Kočna valley, gradually melted away towards the end of the summer in the 1990s, at which point Čedca Waterfall (also known as the Waterfall under Čedca) occasionally dried up.

Professor Ramovš already noted in his book *Waterfalls of Slovenia* that Čedca was among the youngest waterfalls in Slovenia by origin and that its days were numbered... this actually happened in May 2008. A massive rockfall of the wall over which the waterfall flowed completely changed the appearance of the cliffs below Škofova Glava, and Čedca Waterfall was reduced to only a 20-meter free fall. Now, even an unknown waterfall hidden in the walls below Jezerska Kočna is higher with its 30-meter drop. You can read an older description of Čedca on the now-archived display: Čedca Waterfall before 2008.