The Hamilton Spectator

Whee! Niagara Falls adds a little more zip to its image

- MICHAEL HILL

Niagara Falls has become the latest natural wonder to add a zip line, offering honeymoone­rs and everyone else the chance to take an adrenaline-pumping plunge toward churning mist at speeds topping 65 km/h.

The elevated cable rides have evolved from a novel way to explore jungle canopies to almost necessary additions to lure tourists in the 21st century to establishe­d destinatio­ns.

It’s a trend that’s exposed a rift between those who approach nature like contemplat­ive monks and others who require an extreme, Indiana Jones-style experience.

“We can’t make these into museums. We have to keep the general public — the folks that these places have been set aside for — we have to keep them motivated to get out there,” argued Tom Benson, cofounder of WildPlay Element Parks, which built the Niagara Falls zip line on the Canadian side of the falls.

“How do you take a teenager and get them away from a game console to something that is going to capture their imaginatio­n?” he asked.

The booming popularity of commercial zip lines over the past five years — there are at least 200 in the United States alone — means more people are experienci­ng nature in a way that would make Thoreau dizzy.

They can ride above the tree line at New River Gorge in West Virginia, over California’s Catalina Island, above lush Hawaiian landscapes and in view of Denali in Alaska.

A zip line ride in Mexico’s Copper Canyon runs more than two kilometres,

Another zip line in Nepal has a

drop of 600 metres.

And another in Sun City, South Africa, boasts top speeds of 160 km/h.

“You feel all this air rushing past you, it’s this great almost roller coaster-esque feeling,” Quillan Brady said after riding on the new Eagle Flyer zip line at Lake George in New York’s Adirondack­s.

“But really, what I think makes it is looking around and seeing all this natural New York beauty.”

Niagara Falls-area resident James Bannister doesn’t quite see it that way.

To him, the new zip line there amounts to a “circus midway-style attraction.”

“Every once in a while somebody comes along and says, ‘Boy, you could build another great attraction

here!’ As if the falls itself wasn’t enough of an attraction,” Bannister said.

Zip line fans say it’s still possible to marvel at nature while whizzing above it at highway speeds.

At Niagara Falls, WildPlay’s Benson said his four lines angling 670 metres along the Canadian side of the gorge were designed to be sensitive to the local environmen­t.

Catalina Island’s zip line makes stops for presentati­ons at designated “eco-stations.”

And riders of the Lake George zip line who were questioned after their rides said they had a new perspectiv­e on the natural wonder.

The owner of the Lake George line, Ralph Macchio Sr. (father of the “Karate Kid” actor with the same name), said he got the idea gazing atop the Adirondack peaks.

“I thought, ‘Gee, if you could look at it like you were flying like a bird and get that view, that would be an Adirondack experience,’” Macchio said.

 ?? KIEN TRAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourists suspended above the water from zip lines make their way at speeds of up to 64 km/h toward the mist of the Horseshoe Falls.
KIEN TRAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourists suspended above the water from zip lines make their way at speeds of up to 64 km/h toward the mist of the Horseshoe Falls.

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