Stroll through Prospect Park any day of the week — now that the prime tourist season is under way — and you’ll quickly come to the conclusion that there’s indeed a revolution in tourism.
In the travel industry, they’re known as the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and they’re coming by the bus loads — via the charter flights — to Niagara Falls. At present, it appears visitors from India rank No. 1 of the Big Four.
Not that the natural wonder here has just been discovered by the international set. Foreigners have been a major segment of Niagara tourism for more than a century but the UK no longer leads that list, tourism operators generally agree.
Locally, it’s virtually impossible to track the influx.
A large group from India or China may descend on the state park at any time and they often move swiftly — guided by a tour leader — to a specific attraction or vantage point.
Still, after you’re in the park for a half hour and maybe had a chance to observe the exodus from the Prospect Park tower, you’ll be convinced that some of the 47 million Chinese traveling abroad this year have included the Falls on their itinerary. And visitors from Indian and Pakistan are all around as well.
Of course, there was the credible threat that many Americans had been planning to cut back on their vacations this year because of the high gas prices.
That didn’t happen here, at least over the Memorial Day holiday. In fact, attendance in the state park was up more than 8,000 for the comparable weekend a year ago.
If you check out the license plates in Prospect Park and on Goat Island, you would have found visitors from as far away as Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Oregon — a lot more than a tankful away.
That combination — foreigners and Americans determined to go on vacation despite the gas prices — provided for a good start to the season.
Meanwhile, hoteliers and bed-and-breakfast operators will tell you that many foreign visitors — even some U.S. citizens who think the new passport regulations are already in effect — are reluctant to cross the international bridges because of the unwarranted concern they won’t be allowed to return.
It’s an ironic twist from the days when visitors couldn’t wait to clear customs because they were always told the view was better from that side.
•••
MOVING ON: Melanie Pritchard, whose links to the Channel 7 (WKBW-TV) newsroom started in 1997, signed off as a co-anchor on Friday.
A native of Salamanca, Melanie graduated from Ithaca College in 1989 and began her career with WJJL-AM in Niagara Falls. She also worked at WGR-AM and WBEN-AM. Since 2006, she had co-anchored the 5 p.m. newscast on Ch. 7.
Co-workers note the always pleasant staffer won several awards for team and individual coverage over the years.
She’s assuming a new challenge in the real estate business.
•••
UGLY SCENE: The closed Wintergarden — obviously facing a wrecking ball — is now just an eyesore a half-block from the nation’s oldest state park.
It’s not just the complex itself — the filthy windows, the graffiti on plywood and the musty atmosphere — but the immediate surroundings also are disgusting.
For the record, the army of volunteers that tries to spruce up the city every spring is certainly not responsible for conditions at the Wintergarden, especially the interior scum and dirt so visible to the passersby. Property owners or anyone with a vested interest in that parcel needs to take responsibility too.
Months ago, it was reported that the demolition was on hold because of a legal issue. That means, of course, the glass-enclosed junkyard will remain for a while.
Contact reporter Don Glynn at 282-2311, ext. 2246.
Columns
GLYNN: Changes in foreign visitors to Niagara
- Columns
-
-
HAMILTON: BOE and kids, or the SPCA dogs?
There is example after example of otherwise qualified Niagara Falls’ board of education members and staffers lending their time and efforts to organizations outside of the school district’s core business.
-
GLYNN: Trust in SPCA shelter must be restored
Stories about the operations at the Niagara SPCA shelter shape the image of sickening and disgusting treatment of animals.
-
BRADBERRY: Old medicine and new challenges
Having suffered and recovered from my fair share of illnesses and injuries over the years, I have come to believe that sometimes the treatment and the cure of my condition can seem to be far worse than whatever I may think is ailing me at the moment.
-
CONFER: Federal spending derailed by Amtrak
We’ve been inundated with news reports about the fiscal woes of the U.S. Postal Service. Why is it that we never hear anything about another federal enterprise facing ongoing losses -- Amtrak?
-
CITY BEAT: Worthwhile change is never easy
When I was a much younger and thinner reporter, I got a call one day from a particularly irate gentleman who asked me “if my newspaper knew what it was doing?”
-
HIGGS: Family stories and a slow start to the 1800 block
I heard from a couple of my readers who added a few tidbits that I did not know about their families.
-
GLYNN: Cuomo launches drive for better teachers
Gov. Andrew Cuomo appears determined to address the outrageous conditions that have surfaced in schools across the state because incompetent teachers are protected by their unions.
-
PFEIFFER: Beilein still serving area through scholarship
Longtime Niagara County Sheriff Tom Beilein may have moved on to keeping watch over the state’s corrections institutions, but his love of our region remains. Nothing proves that better than the announcement this week of the third annual Thomas A Beilein Scholarship for high school seniors here.
-
HAMILTON: Garabedian and the art of vocational education
I think that former Trott school teacher and vocational education specialist Art Garabedian has it right, vocational education is good for Niagara’s economy.
During State of the Union Address, President Obama challenged the nation’s manufacturers to ask themselves what they could do to bring those manufacturing jobs back to America. -
GLYNN: Mayor excited about Obama tourism initiative
President Obama takes a lot of heat, especially in an election year, but in one area even his most vocal critics must agree he is right on the money.
- More Columns Headlines
-






