Ithaca Falls

Ithaca, New York, USA

About Ithaca Falls

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Waterfall Safety and Common Sense

Ithaca Falls is probably our favorite of the Finger Lakes region of Western New York. We think it could very well be the largest of the waterfalls in the region with a reported 75ft height and a 100ft width plus year-round flow on Fall Creek draining into Cayuga Lake. There are conflicting numbers regarding its dimensions as we’ve also seen it reported to be as much as 150ft high and 175ft wide.

Despite its impressive dimensions, the access to the falls was strangely not well-signed nor did t feature well-developed infrastructure (e.g. a well-defined trail leading to it). Instead, we kind of winged it as we kind of followed some people from a car park with limited space towards Fall Creek then walk upstream along a wide trail of use flanking the creek from there. That said, I’m pretty sure that when in doubt, after leaving the car, you could always look for Fall Creek from the road bridge (on Falls St; see directions below) and then follow the banks of the creek up to the falls. It only took us about 5-10 minutes or so of walking.

From what we could tell, this was still a popular waterfall given its ease of access (once you know where to look) and its proximity to Cornell University. Yet despite this, we felt it retained some degree of tranquility and peace often lacking in such waterfalls so close to a developed town or city.

Like many of the waterfalls in the Finger Lakes region, the underlying bedrock of the falls was a thin, flaky rock known as shale, which I believe . It was because of this property that the falls possessed a ripply appearance that was friendly to long exposure photographs with a tripod (with the proper lighting conditions, I might add).

Julie and I visited this waterfall twice on the same day. The first time, we saw Ithaca Falls at the height of day on a gorgeous sunny day. At that time, there were a handful of people cooling off in its waters or just chilling out in the shade caused by the nearby overhanging shale cliffs. The bright sun also made the scene very bright making it tough to take that long exposure shot, which was the reason why we decided to come back later in the day.

In the late afternoon, I was able to get that long exposure shot. The scene was also much quieter, but this time around we saw locals fishing right at the base of the falls. Clearly, this was a waterfall that can be enjoyed in all kinds of conditions, and I can only imagine students at Cornell University could easily get into waterfalling simply by checking out the area around their campus and the college town of Ithaca itself.

Although we didn’t do this, I understand there was another smaller waterfall further upstream of Ithaca Falls. But we’ll have to wait to say anything more about it until the next time we actually get a chance to see it.

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Tagged with: ithaca, tompkins, cornell, finger lakes, western new york, new york, central new york, waterfall, university, cayuga, upstate



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