By John Barnes
Senior Writer/Visit-Jasper.com
On a clear winter day, or during the summer months when the sun is high in the sky, there is no sight more breathtaking than the mountains and glaciers of the Icefields Parkway (HWY 93 North) that stretches from Lake Louise, (five-minute drive west on the Trans-Canada Highway #1) to the turnoff for jasper via this scenic route.
Make this trip along the Icefields Parkway on a clear day, though sometimes cloudy days will still provide views of the tops of the mountains. Hanging glaciers adorn many of the peaks and, every once in a while, glaciers that spill from the icefields beyond come into view. Anytime you see thick white or blue, you are looking at a glacial ice.
In the course of a day trip from Lake Louise, you should be able to make it to the Columbia Icefield area and back again, which is the most scenic part of the parkway. Allow for 90 minutes of driving time each way. For a trip all the way to Jasper, budget three hours of driving time under good conditions.
The Lake Louise Visitor Centre (next to the Samson Mall) has an invaluable free pamphlet called “The Icefields Parkway” that outlines in detail the viewpoints and trailheads along the way. For even more information, with notes about history and nature included, pick up a copy of Brian Patton’s “Parkways of the Canadian Rockies: and Interpretive Guide to the Roads in the Mountain Parks.”
A River of Ice
The highlight of the parkway is, of course, the Athabasca Glacier which comes tumbling off the Columbia Icefield directly towards the road. Nowhere else in the Rockies is it possible to get a view that encompasses more ice.
The Icefield Visitor Centre has excellent exhibits that help you explore the exotic world of perpetual cold.