Surf & Wind.
The Champlain Bridge wave off Bate Island is a permanent standing river wave inside Ottawa's urban core — one of a small number of Canadian cities with a documented river-surf scene on a recurring inland wave. The wave depends on Ottawa River flow and peaks during spring runoff (April–June); the lower-water Sewer wave carries the surf scene through summer.
The brief.
River surfing here is single-feature and seasonal, but the feature is recurring — the Wall sets up reliably each spring with runoff and the Sewer wave covers the lower-water months. Bate Island is the access point.
Surfers and freestyle whitewater kayakers share the feature with informal etiquette. Conditions are cold-water through spring even when air temperatures rise; full wetsuit gear is the norm.
The feature is urban — visible from the bridge — but operates as serious whitewater: read flow and conditions before paddling out. Inland river-surf cities are rare in Canada; Ottawa's wave puts it on that short list.
2. places.
- 01
Champlain Bridge wave / "the Wall"
River-surfing standing wave off Bate Island on the Ottawa River; spring runoff peak.
- 02
Sewer wave
Secondary, lower-water Ottawa River wave used as flow drops through summer.
Today's read.
Cool but comfortable for layered effort · light winds · clean air.