Travel Photography > Featured photos taken in Canada
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Took some time out in Banff to snowboard at sunshine village at sunrise. Fantastic powder.
top of Delirium Dive - Sunshine Mountain Canada
Early autumn evening in Northern Ontario.
The forest fires were just behind the mountains here
Dépanneur à Montréal
Logan Pass hike was very beautiful and the meadow you find half way is just perfect even is the temperature is chilly.
A hike up any of the Rockies peaks is beautiful but Logan Pass, although we didn't make it to the sumit, was just spectacular.
A closeup of the water from Athabasca Falls, Canada
In the middle of this wonderful drie through the Rockies is this magnificient falls.
On the Beehive hike to see a receeding glacier the vies a spectacular back into the vally.
Early one morning in a RV park I went for a walk down to Dutch Lake this amazing scean of the mist clearing
Bloor subway station Toronto
Street in Old Quebec - Rue de la Menagerie
Taken through the glass front of a sightseeing helicopter.
The Niagara Falls are voluminous waterfalls on the Niagara River, straddling the international border between the Canadian province of Ontario and the U.S. state of New York. The falls are 17 miles (27 km) north-northwest of Buffalo, New York and 75 miles (120 km) south-southeast of Toronto, Ontario, between the twin cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Niagara Falls, New York. Niagara Falls is composed of two major sections separated by Goat Island: Horseshoe Falls, the majority of which lies on the Canadian side of the border, and American Falls on the American side. The smaller Bridal Veil Falls are also located on the American side, separated from the main falls by Luna Island. Niagara Falls were formed when glaciers receded at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation (the last ice age), and water from the newly-formed Great Lakes carved a path through the Niagara Escarpment en route to the Atlantic Ocean. While not exceptionally high, the Niagara Falls are very wide. More than six million cubic feet (168,000 m³) of water falls over the crest line every minute in high flow,[1] and almost 4 million cubic feet (110,000 m³) on average. It is the most powerful waterfall in North America.[2] The Niagara Falls are renowned both for their beauty and as a valuable source of hydroelectric power. Managing the balance between recreational, commercial, and industrial uses has been a challenge for the stewards of the falls since the 1800s.
looking downtown from the banks of the Bow river