Calgary

Harvie Passage draws huge crowds, and a rave review

The latest rebuilding of the Harvie Passage is gaining traction among Calgarians, and good feedback from experts like paddling instructor Mark Taylor.

'There's more features, more things to play in, more places for people to hang out'

A pair of kayakers on the Harvie Passage in Calgary, which officially reopened July 12 after being closed for five years following the 2013 floods. (Anis Heydari/CBC)

The reviews are beginning to flow in for the redesigned Harvie Passage and they're raves.

That's the early feedback anyway from Calgary whitewater expert and paddling instructor Mark Taylor, who already has made a number of visits to test it out.

He gives the Bow River waterway — which officially reopened last Thursday but had been in previews since June 23 — two paddles up.

"It is fantastic. It is so much better than Version 1.0," Taylor said.

"Version 2 now has this more of a lazy, winding river atmosphere to it. It's longer, there's more features, more things to play in, more places for people to hang out and watch and see what's going on," Taylor said in an interview with Rob Brown on The Calgary Eyeopener.

"And for kayakers, [there's] a lot more places to play and have fun."

Water expert and paddling instructor Mark Taylor on the Harvie Passage, in Calgary. (Mark Taylor)

Flood wiped out

The new Harvie Passage was originally open for eight months before being wiped out in the 2013 flood. While that was devastating, the disaster had an upside.

"It made it possible for the engineers and construction people to build a longer, way better course," Taylor said.

The $8-million, five-year long redesign essentially turns the river passage into two very different degrees of difficulty, so that water bugs of every skill level can navigate it.

"The river left channel, closest to Deerfoot Trail, has the majority of the volume of the river going through it. It has some really fun — but very large and could be dangerous to the non-experienced user going down there — waves and things like that," he said.

"The river right side has a smaller portion of the river going through it. It's designed to be a safe passage that almost anybody can float down, but [also contains] enough bends turns and waves to keep the splash up and keep it really fun."

All of it, he added, is quite clearly marked so that no one gets unpleasantly surprised.

"There's a lot of new signage that went up. The boom is still in place upstream of it to try to direct people to the river right side to get them to try to come out and have a look and see what it is they're getting themselves into before they start floating down," he said.

Harvie Passage 2.0 is drawing serious crowds, too.

"It was so busy last Sunday — which was really the first hot day where the Harvie Passage had been open — that there must have been 200 people there," Taylor said.

He said there were kayakers, canoeists, stand-up paddle boarders, people in rafts, river tubes, kids floating down on boogie boards, people swimming in the eddies in the calm parts and people sitting and suntanning on the rocks.

"It was a cool thing to see. It's a fabulous recreation facility just outside of downtown Calgary," he said.

Two reminders from Taylor: always wear a life jacket, no matter how strong a swimmer you consider yourself to be, and the Bow River is always colder than you might expect it to be, even if it's 32 C out.

"It was just ice a few days ago up in the mountains," he said.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stephen Hunt

Digital Writer

Stephen Hunt is a digital writer at the CBC in Calgary. Email: [email protected]