You’ll ride from Jasper along the wild Icefields Parkway with a local guide, feel glacier wind on your skin atop the Columbia Icefield, test your nerves on the Glacier Skywalk, and warm up with a hot buffet lunch before heading home — expect laughter, icy air, and views that stick with you.
I always thought glaciers would feel… quieter, maybe? But the Columbia Icefield is alive in this odd way — wind scraping over ice, boots crunching into snow that never really melts. We left Jasper early (pickup was right at our hotel, which saved us from my usual coffee panic), and the drive along the Icefields Parkway was just window after window of blue rivers and jagged peaks. Our guide, Jamie — who grew up around here — kept pointing out things I’d never have noticed: “That’s bear country,” she said, nodding at a patch of trees where I saw nothing but green. She made us laugh when she described how locals judge spring by whether their trucks get stuck in mud or snow.
Athabasca Falls was louder than I expected — you could hear it before you saw it. The mist hit my face and smelled like cold rocks (if that makes sense). By the time we reached the Columbia Icefield Centre, clouds were rolling in fast, making everything look sharper. Riding out on the Ice Explorer felt a bit surreal; those wheels are huge, and you bounce around more than you’d think. Standing on the glacier itself — well, I tried to scoop up some ice to taste but mostly just got numb fingers. Jamie told us not to wander too far (“the crevasses aren’t as friendly as they look”), so we mostly just shuffled around taking photos and grinning at each other like kids let loose in a snow fort.
The Glacier Skywalk is one of those things that sounds scarier than it feels — until you look down through the glass. My knees did this weird jelly thing but I couldn’t stop staring at the valley below; there’s something about seeing tiny cars crawl along the Parkway that makes you feel both huge and small at once. Lunch back at the centre was a hot buffet (nothing fancy but honestly perfect after all that cold air), and I found myself watching people’s cheeks slowly lose their pink as they warmed up inside. We headed back to Jasper late afternoon, tired but kind of giddy. There’s still glacier dust on my boots.
The tour lasts most of the day, returning to Jasper late in the afternoon.
Yes, pickup is available from multiple locations in Jasper if arranged before your travel date.
The tour includes admission to Columbia Icefield Skywalk, ride in an Ice Explorer vehicle onto the glacier, taxes, pickup/drop-off options, hot buffet lunch, and transport.
Yes, transportation options are wheelchair accessible and service animals are allowed.
Infants are required to sit on an adult’s lap or can ride in a pram or stroller during transport.
Dress warmly with layers; weather can change quickly on the glacier and it stays cold year-round.
Your day includes hotel pickup from Jasper if prearranged, entry to both Columbia Icefield Skywalk and glacier experience aboard an Ice Explorer vehicle, all local taxes covered, a hot buffet lunch to warm up mid-day, plus comfortable air-conditioned transport throughout before returning in late afternoon.
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