North River Falls
Trail Info
Maps / Tracks
References
Trail Info
Length: 18 km
Duration: 5-7h
Difficulty: 5
Cell Phone Service: No
The largest waterfalls in the Maritimes, the mighty 32 meter North River Falls is a truly breathtaking sight. The mist from their watery wrath will be cooling your face as you recover from the initial sighting and make your make way closer to the base. In June through mid-July, a large number of Canadian Tiger Swallowtail butterflies migrate and take limited residence here and along the river. Time it with the leaves changing the fall for an extra mind-numbing experience.
Possible wildlife: rare American martin, moose, foxes, owls, hawks, pheasants, deer, and coyotes. There is also a high population of black bears, lynx, and bobcats in the mountains.
Duration: 5-7h
Difficulty: 5
Cell Phone Service: No
Bio
The trail starts by climbing a steep hill which joins an old settlement road made/used by Scottish settlers in the mid-1800s. Many of their old stone foundations are still intact in various locations along the hike. The settlement road goes through a series of mixed hardwood and softwood forest winding along the mountains. Eventually, the woods along the trail thins out and you hit the old MacLean farm. At the fork in the trail veer to the right and head towards "the benches" and onward to Old Forest. Once you make it through the Old Forest the hike becomes increasingly more difficult as you wind your way through more mountains, scale riverside cliffs, nervously cross old hand-made bridges and cross over the east branch of the river twice. As you near the end of the trail the landmass opens up there are the falls.The largest waterfalls in the Maritimes, the mighty 32 meter North River Falls is a truly breathtaking sight. The mist from their watery wrath will be cooling your face as you recover from the initial sighting and make your make way closer to the base. In June through mid-July, a large number of Canadian Tiger Swallowtail butterflies migrate and take limited residence here and along the river. Time it with the leaves changing the fall for an extra mind-numbing experience.
Possible wildlife: rare American martin, moose, foxes, owls, hawks, pheasants, deer, and coyotes. There is also a high population of black bears, lynx, and bobcats in the mountains.
Maps / Tracks
References
Share:
- Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
- Click to print (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)
- Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)
3 Comments
Leave a ReplyCancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
The trailhead is two trails. The trail closest to the river is shorter and less difficult and takes about an hour and a half to complete ( probably less for younger hikers who don’t stop to look around). It’s wet and boggy in areas.
Are both trails (short and long) marked? Is there a place to park?
Both trails are very well worn and the Big Falls trail is well marked. There is a small parking area before the North River Provincial Park and then plenty of parking in the park itself, should the gate be open. There is a trailhead near both parking areas.
You can make a loop out of the Little Falls trail using the angling path that follows the river and goes back up to join the main trail at MacKenzie Pool or go in-and-out.