Thanks for showing all the pics with tunnel locations. I am looking forward to spring time so I can walk around most of NF without freezing or hurting. Knowing as much as I do now about these plants and such is great as I understand what I am seeing better. I didn't know they were building a new tunnel. I would love to go see what machine is doing the boring.
I do feel bad for the trees around the falls. All of the limbs were broken off and I realized this happens every year to those trees. It looks terrible but it sounded amazing as the ice was melting and breaking off the trees on the hill. It was like broken glass falling on more glass. The mist makes some amazing ice sculptures. I will be up there a couple more times this year including New Years Eve for a party at the Fallsview. I will be staying at the Hilton though for New Years. How far away do you live from the Falls? One of these days when it is nice out it would be great to meet you and learn some more history as I look at the real things.
You're quite welcome Robert.
You should have a great time there on New Years, and I hope your back is feeling better soon.
Our family were refugees too. My dad got a job in Hamilton, then Toronto, so we gradually moved further away. My wife, born in Niagara Falls, along with all her relatives also left. All my other relatives stayed there. Pretty well everyone worked for either GM (St. Catharines Engine Plant), or Ford Glass, Carborundum or Norton. My mom worked for American Cyanamid for awhile. My grandmother worked in Niagara Falls NY and crossed the Honeymoon Bridge (Upper Steel Arch Bridge) everyday going to work. She claimed she was one of the last pedestrians to cross before its closure and subsequent collapse, due to a severe ice jam in 1938.
Where I live now is about 2 hours away, about 50 km north of Toronto. The east-west 407 ETR toll highway bypass north of Toronto, which now extends west all the way to Hamilton has made the trek to the Niagara Region a fair bit quicker and less stressful. The Mississauga-Oakville-Burlington section of the QEW is worth avoiding. It would be nice to meet up sometime (I agree, when it is warm!) and show you some interesting stuff that is not well known even by the locals. Some of it is not in Niagara Falls proper, but nearby, such as the old Welland Canal (there were 4), ruins of Neptune's Staircase, Bruce Trail, DeCew Falls at Power Glen, Port Dalhousie... I could go on and on though.
Speaking of Power Glen, there are two more generating stations (DeCew Falls Plants 1 and 2) that hardly anyone knows about, just west of Brock University in St. Catharines. They are virtually hidden unless you know where to find them:
(From the IEEE site) "The first plant at DeCew Falls , two miles from St. Catharines, was built by the Cataract Power Company to supply power to Hamilton, a distance of 35 miles. It draws water directly from Lake Erie through the Welland Canal, with a storage reservoir in Lake Gibson. Seven steel penstocks are supported on the hillside by concrete piers. The direct-connected, turbo-generator units are mounted horizontally on a gravel foundation. The tail-water is carried downstream in Twelve Mile Creek to Lake Ontario at Port Dalhousie. The head is 260 feet. This plant began operation with two 1,500-hp units on 26 August 1898; two 3,000-hp units were added in 1900; the plant was completed in 1912 with a total output of 44,600 KVA at 66 2/3 cycles. It supplied power to Hamilton several years before Niagara power reached Toronto. In 1930 it was bought by Ontario Hydro and converted to 60 cycles. This is the oldest Niagara area plant still operating."
Decew Falls GS Tour - (C) 2008 Professor Mark Csele