Wildlife Viewing.
Bald eagles overwinter on the open water of the lower Niagara River — the river stays unfrozen below the falls year-round, which is the whole reason the wintering is reliable here. Viewing is reliable from the Niagara Parkway and the river-edge trails between Old Town and Queenston Heights, with the November-through-February window peaking in January and February.
The river mouth at Lake Ontario stages waterfowl and gulls on the same calendar.
The brief.
The variant on this card is `raptor-eagle` per the canonical taxonomy. NOTL holds the wintering raptor presence and the mouth-of-the-river waterfowl reliably; the marquee Niagara River gull-staging assemblage is centred downstream at Adam Beck in the City of Niagara Falls, which is a separate field guide.
Best window is November through February with peak in January and February. Eagles are easiest to spot from pull-offs along the Niagara Parkway and from the Niagara River Recreation Trail; bring binoculars.
Dress for the lake-effect wind off Lake Ontario at the river mouth — it's exposed.
2. places.
- 01
Lower Niagara River corridor
Bald eagle wintering area along the lower river; viewing reliable from the Niagara Parkway and the river-edge trails between Old Town and Queenston Heights, November–February.
- 02
Niagara River mouth and Lake Ontario shoreline
Waterfowl and gull staging on the river mouth in winter; exposed and lake-effect cold.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.