Our Canada

NIAGARA’S FROZEN TUNDRA

Breathtaki­ng winter vistas from one of Canada’s natural wonders

- By John Busch, St. Thomas, Ont.

For the most part of my 70 years I’ve always lived within a four-hour drive of Niagara Falls and, as such, I have had many opportunit­ies to visit this amazing place. From school trips, earning the funds to charter an Air Canada aircraft to fly over the falls, to our honeymoon, I have lost track of the number of times I have been to the area. I have also been under the falls through the tunnels, and I have, of course, been on the Maid of the Mist cruise. It seemed strange that the area of the cruise would now be covered with thick ice.

When I heard the gorge was frozen over during the winter, back in 2015, I decided to drive for two hours to the falls to see what kind of photo opportunit­ies I could find. It was a cold day with light winds, a bit of sun with cloudy periods, ideal for photograph­y.

When we arrived at the falls, it was not what I expected.

We walked to where we always started our tour, the Horseshoe Falls. Nearly everything was white with the only exceptions being the sky and the odd flash of turquoise water around the ice, so it was nice to have the sun blocked periodical­ly to give some contrast and shadow. Even the nearby trees had several inches of ice on the branches and trunks. We were able to get an unobstruct­ed view of the falls and the gorge, as it was o season for tourists.

I was thankful for the breeze, cold as it was, because it moved mist out of the way so we could view the water flowing over the edge. We did have a great view of the American Falls as the water flow did not seem to generate the mist. The ice had piled up in huge mounds over the winter, as it seemed to build up from the rock foundation below the falls, something which is not present below the Horseshoe Falls.

As we walked over the icy sidewalks downriver to the docking station of the Maid of the Mist, I was continuous­ly taking photos. The clouds were constantly moving overhead, and the mist was wafting around at the will of the breezes. I had never observed the long ice falls hanging from the layers of limestone on the walls above the gorge between the two waterfalls. The photo that shows this phenomenon also shows people on the top of the gorge on the American side, which puts the size of the icicles into perspectiv­e.

On our return walk back to the Horseshoe Falls, I was able to take the same photos again, but with different lighting, and

when much of the mist over the falls was displaced by the breeze. When we got to the right viewpoint, we were able to see a rainbow in the mist over the falls.

Mother Nature does not look at this frozen waterway with our eyes. I saw cormorants, gulls and an osprey hanging around on the nearby trees or sitting on the edge of some open water in the gorge, waiting for fish to show themselves. It provided a small window for them to feed.

Every time I visit, I start at Horseshoe Falls and eventually make my way downriver to the Whirlpool Rapids. This portion of the river never freezes. It is one of life’s great pleasures to take a cable car ride across the whirlpool in season.

All in all, it was a breathtaki­ng winter visit to Niagara Falls.

 ??  ?? Clockwise from above: the crest of Horseshoe Falls; a very cool vantage point; a wintry tableau.
Clockwise from above: the crest of Horseshoe Falls; a very cool vantage point; a wintry tableau.
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 ??  ?? From left to right: Mother Nature and her sculpture; John’s wife Mary Lynn posing with the ice build-up on a guard rail; a winter rainbow.
From left to right: Mother Nature and her sculpture; John’s wife Mary Lynn posing with the ice build-up on a guard rail; a winter rainbow.
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