Cartnoon

A couple of years back, on our return trip from ek hornbeck’s great-uncle’s funeral we stop in Niagara Falls staying a couple of days to relax and explore the Falls, first the Canadian side then the American side on our way back to Stars Hollow. It was spectacular and we had plans to return to do more exploring. This is a video of many of the sights along the Niagara Gorge, many if which we visited. We weren’t as daring or as ambitious as the videos’ narrator,. trust me, we did do our share of walking and climbing and, fortunately, I made sure our hotel had a marvelous hot tub.

Niagara Gorge is an 11 km (6.8 mi) long canyon carved by the Niagara River along the Canada–United States border, between the U.S. state of New York and the Canadian province of Ontario. It begins at the base of Niagara Falls and ends downriver at the edge of the geological formation known as the Niagara Escarpment near Queenston, Ontario, where the falls originated about 12,500 years ago. The position of the falls has receded upstream toward Lake Erie because of the falling waters’ slow erosion of the riverbed’s hard Lockport dolomite (a form of limestone that is the surface rock of the escarpment), combined with rapid erosion of the relatively soft layers beneath it. This erosion has created the gorge.

The force of the river current in the gorge is one of the most powerful in the world; because of the dangers this presents, kayaking the gorge has generally been prohibited. On multiple occasions, the rapids of the gorge have claimed the lives of people attempting to run them. However, on isolated occasions, world-class experts have been permitted to navigate the stretch. Tourists can traverse the rapids of the Niagara Gorge on commercial tours in rugged jetboats, which are based at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, at Lewiston, New York, at Youngstown, New York, and in midsummer at Niagara Glen Nature Centre on the Niagara Parkway in Ontario.

 

TMC for ek hornbeck