Find out why winter is the best time to visit Ottawa with this guide to the season
Sponsored by
Nov 24, 2021 • 4 min read
Ottawa is known as a longstanding capital of winter fun © Thomas Brissiaud / Shutterstock
Ottawa, Canada’s capital city, is famous for its picturesque winter landscapes. So, it’s no surprise that in a place known as a longstanding capital of winter fun, Ottawans know how to enjoy the season.
Welcome to Ottawa in winter from an insider’s perspective! We’ll take you beyond the most popular cold-weather activities in the city, like skating on the Rideau Canal Skateway, marveling at ice sculptures, and warming up with a BeaverTail, to discover everyday winter adventures that locals just adore.
Minutes from downtown, you can be tearing up the snow on fat bikes, cross-country skiing, or seeing how traditional maple syrup is made. Join us for a glimpse of what it’s like to spend the season in Canada’s original winter wonderland.
Enjoy the Greenbelt
Ottawa is surrounded and crisscrossed by 203.5-square-kilometers (78.6 square miles) of pristine, protected Greenbelt, comprised of wetlands, forests, farms, and green space. In the colder months, it’s covered in a blanket of snow and transforms into a magical winter woodland.
Visit Mer Bleue Bog, a 7,700-year-old scientific wonder and one of the most studied bogs in the world. A boardwalk allows you to walk right into the habitat of many wild animals, including rare spotted turtles, muskrats, and beavers, while interpretive panels give you some background knowledge on the unique features of this northern boreal landscape. The trails are accessible year-round, and if you want to pop on some snowshoes or cross-country skis, you can connect from the Dewberry trails – a 1km (0.6 mile) beginner’s path – to numerous other routes that link up and extend across the area.
Pack some sunflower seeds in your pocket when you walk through Jack Pine Trail on Moodie Drive and, if you stand quite still with your hand extended, you might be visited by some friendly chickadees who are all too keen to relieve you of those seeds. Keep an eye out for children’s handmade bird feeders hanging from the trees. You can cross-country ski, snowshoe, or walk the 1.5km (0.9 miles) trail all winter long.
Skate in Ottawa
It isn’t winter in Ottawa without a skate down the Rideau Canal Skateway – the largest ice skating rink in the world. As temperatures drop, the historic canal, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and a favorite spot with locals to walk, cycle, and jog beside, freezes over. Skate the 7.8km (4.8 miles) length, which winds into downtown and gives you stunning views of the city, including the castle-like Fairmont Château Laurier.
The Skateway’s season is, of course, dependent on the weather but usually runs from January to March. Treat yourself to a BeaverTail pastry, an Ottawa invention, in the ByWard Market after your skate.
Ottawa also boasts many other skating spots, including The Rink of Dreams in front of City Hall, which is free to use and looks magical lit up at night.
Get active in the snow
Ottawans don’t let frigid temperatures keep them indoors, and neither should you. Dress warm and get out and active in the snow. If you have your own snowshoes, simply head out to any of the many trails across the city which feature snowshoe routes throughout winter. Bilberry Creek Ravine is an easy and picturesque 1.9km (1.1 miles) trail that crosses a river and pretty bridges. Check mountain equipment stores to rent snowshoes for the day or the week.
For cross-country skiing right in the heart of the city, enjoy a day on the Kichi Sibi Winter Trail (formerly the Sir John A. Macdonald Winter Trail or SJAM). The Kichi Sibi Winter Trail is a popular 16km (9.9 miles) trail used by a range of different winter sports enthusiasts and walkers. The route takes you through busy, trendy neighborhoods and offers lots of spots to take a detour and stop for a drink or a bite to eat.
Fat bikes are often allowed on multi-use trails like the Kichi Sibi Winter Trail, but you should yield to cross-country skiers and snowshoers and respect trail etiquette. Try the South March Highlands in Kanata, which has lots of trails to test out those hardwearing tires.
Taste the Season
At the tail end of winter in late February and early March, when daytime temperatures start to warm up a little, but the nights are still very cold, it’s the perfect time for the maple sap to flow, and that’s when you should visit a sugar bush.
Check out Fulton’s Pancake House and Sugar Bush, and other locations just a short drive from the city for a taste of Canada’s liquid gold. During sugar bush season, they make maple taffy poured directly on the snow, teach visitors about maple syrup production, and open trails on the property for walks. Now, that’s the perfect way to enjoy a winter day in Ottawa.
For more information, visit Ottawa Tourism online to find attractions, events, and activities based on your preferences.
Sponsored by Ottawa Tourism
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This story was crafted collaboratively between Ottawa Tourism and Lonely Planet. Both parties provided research and curated content to produce this story. We disclose when information isn’t ours.
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Determines the concept, provides briefing, research material, and may provide feedback.
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