An early visitor to Maligne Canyon (“mah-LEEN”) commented: “Any other canyon is like a crack in a tea cup.” It’s true. This canyon is 55 m (180 ft. deep) at Second Bridge—that's the height of an 18-storey building. Look for raven nests on the walls, and potholes drilled into the streambed over thousands of years by boulders trapped in eddies.  There are three access points into the canyon. If you have the time, walk its full length from Sixth Bridge to First Bridge. Beginning in a lush forest replete with ferns and horsetails, the trail parallels the Maligne River; a blue-green ribbon of beauty.  Two rivers feed Maligne Canyon. One flows underground from Medicine Lake (17 km up the valley) to the lower canyon. At the height of the melt season, up to eight times as much water discharges into the lower canyon than into the upper canyon, evidence of what may be the longest and largest underground river in the world. The name Maligne (French for “wicked”) was given to this river by a missionary who had trouble fording its turbulent waters.