First Ascent of Della Falls, the Highest Waterfall in Canada
Top ice climber Will Gadd, West Coast local Chris Jensen and photographer Peter Hoang have made the first ascent of Della Falls in Strathcona Park on Vancouver Island. Della Falls is considered the highest waterfall in Canada at 440 metres and has been the talk of focus of many conversations among climbers as to whether it completely freezes.
To access the route, you need to take an hour-long boat ride to the northwest end of Great Central Lake. While there was plenty of snow and ice around the temperatures had started to rise.
On the West Coast Ice Facebook page, Jensen wrote, “With the wet conditions were weren’t feeling very optimistic that we’d find decent ice. After about 14km of slogging in snowshoes, we rounded a bend and saw the first real ice in the valley: Della Falls. It was on! My face lit up. The weather also cleared and temps dropped to -10 overnight. Perfect.”
The trio climbed the tall route in seven pitches: WI4, WI3, WI4, WI4, WI6, WI5 and WI3. Jensen said that they took the direct line up the centre and that there are other lines that could go at WI4+.
“The WI6 pitch had big overhanging mushroom funkiness and sparse good gear,” said Jensen. “The WI5 pitch was some of the nicest Island ice I’ve swung into. Vertical solid blue bliss. We were stoked to top out in the sun with views of Nine Peaks and Big Interior.”
For decades, Gadd has been at the cutting-edge of the sport of mixed and ice climbing and he’s made first ascents of many of Canada’s most famous waterfalls, including Niagara Falls and Helmcken. He also established the world’s first M12 with Musashi in the Canadian Rockies and opened the first 5.13 on Yamnuska with Yamabushi. He climbed his first peak at age eight with his dad, has set two world records for paragliding and has kayaked some of the most wild rivers on the planet.
James Bruce Falls is known as the highest waterfall in North America and ninth in the world. Located in Princess Louisa Marine Provincial Park in B.C., it flows from a small snowfield for 840 metres down to Princess Louisa Inlet. However, the two flows have been known to dry up during hot summers, making it not a year-round waterfall.