We were just on the eiver walk and it was amazing and a little information they do up grades during off season weather permitting. The stairs you saw were the emergency exit if the lifts stop working. Alot of the rusty iron is from the old rail line that was there. The trees that are down were ash trees that died from the ask borer bug. As for your most deadliest area you in the wrong area. You must travel down the river to the Niagara Glen where at one time you could get down to the water. I have fishes the Glen for years and lived in Niagara Falls all my life. People from our of town do not respect the river and just see water do understand how powerful she is.
Yes there used to be metal rails on the side where they reconstructed it.
We were just on the eiver walk and it was amazing and a little information they do up grades during off season weather permitting. The stairs you saw were the emergency exit if the lifts stop working. Alot of the rusty iron is from the old rail line that was there. The trees that are down were ash trees that died from the ask borer bug. As for your most deadliest area you in the wrong area. You must travel down the river to the Niagara Glen where at one time you could get down to the water. I have fishes the Glen for years and lived in Niagara Falls all my life. People from our of town do not respect the river and just see water do understand how powerful she is.
Great insights and clarifications!
What day of the week did you go and what time? How long do you think it takes start to finish? Thanks!
This was early spring on a Thursday however the tour takes 30mins to 1hr depending on how busy.
I dive for pool sticks here.
Niagara is full of wonders!
$17.50 to look at water?
It is arguable that almost every attraction in town is essentially looking at water