CAA Manitoba Winter 2016 | Page 36

19th-century honeymooners at the falls Chillin’ in Niagara How to win at winter when visiting Ontario’s famed falls By LIz fLemIng in spite of his bad-boy brother and his own reputation as a scandalous ladies’ man, Jérôme Bonaparte, Napoleon’s younger sibling, managed to convince Baltimore society girl Elizabeth Patterson to marry him. How? He promised her a honeymoon in Niagara Falls. That famous duo was one of the first ever to travel to the “Honeymoon Capital of the World.” Today, more than 50,000 couples come each year to celebrate their own nuptials—and they represent just a small fraction of the 12 million people who visit annually. Two centuries on, Niagara is still the place to be. Though spring, summer and fall are the seasons when tourists arrive in droves, winter offers the most striking views and exciting outdoor activities. Hotel rates are lower, restaurants have shorter queues and the whole place glistens with an icy welcome. The wintry sidewalks beside the Niagara Gorge are a great photo vantage point, but total immersion in the raging water is what you want. Journey Behind the Falls takes you 45 metres down into a tunnel bored » 36 Winter 2016 CAA Manitoba honeyMooners: Photo researchers, inc/alaMy; falls: niagara Parks coMMission In the summer of 1803, A winter wonderland near the Horseshoe Falls