368 THE WEST SHORE. centra of the Horseshoe Fall in a solid column of water of twenty foot, and it ii estimated that 1,500,000,0(10 cubic feet pans over the fall every minute. Thin great water system of riven and lakes affocU the climate of the older provinces of Canada, and the other large rivers, with the numerous bodies of frosb watur distributed over so large portion of the whole surface of the Dominion, help to preserve an equable climate, and afford many facilities for local tranKrt The degrees of latitude are a very partial guide to the character of the Canadian climate as compared with that of the British Isles, and auy statement of the mean temperature of the two is deceptive. The severity of the winter, as tested by the thermomoter, loads to a very exagguratod improasion of Canadian experiences. Owing to the dry, cloar, bracing atmosphere which genorally prevails, the souse of discomfort produced by the raw eastorly winds and damp fogs of an English spring sug gests an idea of cold such as is rarely thought of in a Canadian winter. There are, indeed, every winter a few days of intense cold, as in the summer there are briof period of equally intense heat, when the thermomoter ascend, or descends, through a scale unknown in the more oquablo English olimato. But throughout the greater port of the winter season in Canada the sky is bright and clear and the weather thoroughly enjoyable. Open sleighs are in use by all. Skating, snowshoeing, tologgsuiiig and other outdoor exorcises are iu universal favor, and the sound of the sleigh bells in the open thoroughfare adds to the exhilarating sense produced by the pure bracing atmosphere. In the Province of Quebec the snow begins to lie early in November; in Ontario it is fully a mouth later; and it differs correspondingly at various localities throughout the Dominion. But every where the appearance of the snow is hailod as seasonable and beneficial. It protect the wheat sown in autumn from the frost, affords facilities to the farmer for brine iug his produce to market, aids the lumberman in collect ing the fruiU of his labor in the forest at suitable points for transort by water with the spring freshets, and so contributes alike to business and ploasure. The following table of averages will be of service in comparing the climate of various portions of the Domin ion. It is compiled from official reports and represents the averages of several years' observations at the chief station in each province. Two points are selected in British Columbia owing to the great difference in climate between the coast and interior: ;( , . " ". lotk. IttrK. n iiu) fi. m !.. ur - III ML! U.IH is iiu m;s II Ut I - - 11J J- April. fW. W 0m i i u ii.i ui Ui 11.1 u Ho 1U brm H'viwtrk ... H.I I: .4 li 41.1 ttt .... IU V L tl il l rnMM,M.., It) HI HI l I i MtU. ........ It H . UI KL4 S- ik B.C. ttl hui 114 II I U.I Vw-kC. ... ;. tu.1 iu ha As will be seen from the above table January is Uie coldest month of the year. Throughout the whole of Canada steady sleighing is reckoned upon during Janu ary and Feltruary. In Quebeo and in Manitoba a longer jwriod of sleighing oaa be relied upon. In Xova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, and also on the Pacific coasts, the temperature is modified both in summer and winter according to vicinity to the sen. Abrupt changes of temperature occur both in summer and in winter. A period of great cold early in the month of January is so frequently followed by a complete change that its periodioity is reckoned upon under the name of the January thaw. Snow finally disappears in Quebec about the middle of April In Ontario it is generally gone a month earlier. The table of average fall of snow given above shows its prevalence at various central points in each of the provinces of the Dominion, from October to the end of April. Plowing usually commences in Ontario about the middle of April, and in favorable seasons is prolonged into the month of Deoember. But throughout the Do minion, stretching as it does across the continent, the period varies with the locality, and is affected by the vicinity of the great lakes or other local influences. Cat tle are turned out to graze in April, feeding in part upon (he tender shoots of the spring forest growth, until the appearance of the young pasture with the disappearance of the snow. Before the end of July harvest begins; and with the rapidity of growth undor the warm Canadian skies, the hay, grain and root crops follow in swift suc cession, the cleared laud is brought again under the plow, and the autumn sowing of wheat is carried on till an other abrupt change brings the season to a close. In this way the Canadian climate is marked by the striking contrast of two seasons summer and winter bringing with them alternations of fruitful labor and of repose intermingled with profitable industry and pleasure. This characteristic prevails with slight variations throughout the greater part of the Dominion. Manitoba presents in this respect no marked diversity from Quebec or Ontario. Spring opens nearly at the same time from Bed River to the Athabasca. Early in April the alders and willows of the Saskatchewan country are in bloom; the prairie anem one covers the southern exposures to the very yerge of the retreating snow. May there brings with it more of the true summer boat than in the provinces on the Si Iwrenoe. But the nights are cool, and throughout the period of greatest heats the cool night breezes beget a welcome and refreshing change, accompanied with heavy dews. This protects the cereals from the effects of drought even in the driest seasons, and produces a rich growth of prairie grass, making the climate peculiarly favorable for the stock farmer. The Iter. Professor Brycc, of Winnipeg College, thus writes:. "The winters of the Northwest, upon the whole, are agreeable and singularly steady. The moccasin is dry and comfortable throughout, and no thaw, strictly speaking, takes place till spring, no matter how mild the weather may be. The snow, though shallow, wears well, and differs greatly from Eastern snow. Its flake is dry and bard, and its gritty consistence resembles white slippery sand more than anything else. Generally speaking, the farther West the shallower the snow, and the rule obtains even into the heart of the Rocky Mountains. In Southwest-