The South Riding RV Travels

576

28th May 2010 - Icefields Parkway AB - Athabasca Falls AB - Jasper AB Alberta

About halfway to Jasper you reach the Columbia Glacier. Here you can take a bus onto the glacier and thousands of tourists do each year.
The two black dots are glacier crawlers climbing up to the main glacier. Given the visibility and the cold and the fact we have done this trip before we decided to travel on. After all we haven't even got to mile zero on the Alaska highway yet.
Lake Louise to Jasper is about 150 miles with no services, no radio, no phone coverage. Just mountains and trees and rivers - and glaciers!
And it can seem endless. I remember last time it was 'Wow - a glacier' at the beginning, and by the end it was 'Oh - another glacier'. Besides by now it was raining!
Still you cannot fail to be awed by the scenery and the emptiness of it all.
I marvel at the people who created the original access to these places. They must have had a reason other than tourism. There is little sign that the area is managed for timber or mined.
So, approaching Jasper, we reached the Athabascan Falls. They have a drop of 80ft and a width of 60ft. Although not a great drop, the narrowness of the gorge through which the water falls creates the enormous force for which these falls are chiefly known.
The Athabasca River starts at the Columbia glacier and is already impressive by this point.
A layer of quartzite has assisted the water to cut through the limestone creating potholes where the swirl of the water has eaten the rock away.
There are several other channels where the water has flowed in the past only to run dry when the river found an easier path.
Again there were lots of visitors, mainly English this time although there was a busload of Asian teenagers.
The power at this point is just awesome.
A reminder of just how powerful nature can be.
It also brings pleasure since white water rafting starts just below the falls. It looked fairly innocuous but......
Just before we reached the campsite, we spotted a number of stopped cars all watching mama bear and her two cubs. One seemed to be permanently hidden behind a bush but the other and mama were unconcerned by the tourists only feet away.