Sunday, the first day of the new season, was a proper spring day -- bright sunshine, 16-17 degrees, mild westerly winds. So, I took Osi the Raven for a canter to the Hogsback Falls on the Rideau River, in the south-central part of Ottawa, about 7-8 kms SE of where I live. It's a pleasant ride through the Experimental Farm, across the Rideau Canal at Hartwell's Locks to the edge of Carleton University, then due south for a km or two, between the Rideau River to the east and the Canal to the west.
The Falls are the point where the Rideau River diverges from the built Rideau Canal. (The Canal system runs for 202 kms between Ottawa and Kingston. It's not a single built canal, but a remarkable collection of 49 locks and short built canals linking lakes and rivers. There's more here if you're interested:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rideau_Canal)
The Rideau is a gentle river for most of its south-to-north course to the Ottawa River, but changes its character dramatically at the Hogsback, especially in spring. The section of the Rideau Canal which runs north from the Falls to the Ottawa River is the longest built section of the entire Canal system, culminating in the magnificent staircase of eight locks descending to the Ottawa beside Parliament Hill.
The Hogsback Falls are our neighbourhood (lite) variant of Murchison Falls. The Rideau is hardly the Nile, of course, and a visitor will not see the ghosts of Bogart, Hepburn and the film crew of "The African Queen". And, there are no crocs, hippos, elephants. But, there is a splendid torrent bursting between narrow rocks, and best of all, it's less than 30 minutes from my back door.
Signs of spring were everywhere, even before I left the house: sunblock on me nose for the first time in six months
Then, I passed by a small flock of geese in a field in the Farm, maybe 15 or 20. They were sleek and plump creatures, looking more like bourgeois geese who'd spent the winter in the fleshpots of the nation's capital than hungry aviators who'd just touched down after several days' journey from the southern states.
Have attached some photos of the Falls and Rideau River downstream.
The first two are taken from the side of the road between the Rideau River and the Canal. The third shows the shale rock beneath and around the Falls, with my Raven pointing back to the spot from which the first photos were taken.
Three more photos follow in a separate post: two close views of the torrent, and a final one of an Orthodox dome which has kept its shine despite the winter.