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Canada - The Icefield Parkway

The Icefields Parkway is quite simply, the most visually amazing road that I have ever driven upon. 230 kilometres of, and I quote: 'An unending succession of huge peaks, immense glaciers, iridescent lakes, wildflower meadows, wild life and forests-one of the worlds ultimate drives'.

Suffice to say, it did not disappoint.

day15-2.jpg (50384 bytes) The first mandatory stop, just a few miles south of Jasper, are the Athabasca Falls. day15-4.jpg (45713 bytes) Just watching all those cubic metres of water crashing over a lip of quartzite. (it says here)

It makes one feel quite weak at the power of nature.

Mt. Kerkeslin with a smoky veil in the background.

Having crashed through the quartzite rocks, it settles into a canyon smoothed by aeons of watery erosion: 24/7 as the saying goes.

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day15-7.jpg (72079 bytes) The canyon rejoins the river Athabascar on its way to Jasper (I sense a rhyme)

How long will that tree hang on in there? 

day15-8.jpg (36155 bytes) Same falls, long exposure.

Same falls, other side, and a willing model!

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A different viewpoint, and another tree in peril?

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day15-12.jpg (61839 bytes) The Sunwapta Falls, with a welcome dash of sunlight.

Now we're getting into big boys country, approaching the epicentre of Canada's  glacial activity. The Athabasca Glacier is part of the Columbia Icefield which is the largest sub polar icefield on the continent. This and four others produce meltwater that flows off into three oceans: the Arctic, Pacific and the Atlantic. Not too many places on earth where that happens.
 
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day15-14.jpg (150319 bytes) An information board spells it out. All quite awe inspiring.

 

Later that morning, we arrive at the Athabasca visitor centre, park up, and start walking towards the glacier. In the year 1870, this would have taken no time at all, but over the years, the glacier has retreated, year on year. Along the walk are small notices with the year at which the glacier was at that point. This picture shows the steady procession of people heading for its present position. day15-15.jpg (82727 bytes)
day15-16.jpg (59040 bytes) As we approach, the temperature falls noticeably. day15-17.jpg (74024 bytes) Jean has just passed the 1982 marker. The building on the right of frame is where the glacier ended in 1870; 1.5 kilometres away.

Soot and ash from the forest fires has accelerated the melting of all the glaciers this year.

The horizontal scratches on this boulder were caused by the glacier in the past. 

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Thar she blows! Not exactly diminutive and still quite scary to walk on because of the many crevasses.

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day15-20.jpg (66241 bytes) I listened in to the safety briefing that these hikers were getting; it was enough to put you off even starting. day15-21.jpg (61986 bytes) Well, I just had to get a close-up of the 'toe' of the glacier, and that meant stepping out beyond the barrier and past all the advisory notices. I paid for it when my right trainer was subsumed into ankle deep glacial mud!