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Niagara University’s location is unrivaled.
Located atop the rugged, water-carved
Niagara River gorge, the university is just four miles from the
world famous cataracts of
Niagara Falls, N.Y. The beautifully maintained suburban campus
is an attractive blend of
19th and 20th century architecture, overlooking the Province of Ontario.
Two major international airports are near the campus. Buffalo-Niagara
International
Airport is less than a half-hour south and Toronto’s Pearson
International is less than 90 miles north. An excellent network
of roads and rail service help with travel in, and
around, the region.
The cost-of-living index in the Buffalo/Niagara Falls metropolitan
area ranks among the ten lowest areas in the nation.
Western New York and Southern Ontario offer a variety of cultural,
entertainment, and
recreational options. The NFL’s Buffalo Bills, NHL’s
Buffalo Sabres and Toronto Maple Leafs, the NBA’s Toronto
Raptors and Triple-A baseball’s Buffalo Bisons surround the
area. Two nearby Great Lakes, Erie and Ontario, offer sailing and
prime sport fishing.
The Niagara Frontier, including Buffalo and vicinity, experiences
a fairly humid, continental-type climate, but with a definite “maritime” flavor
due to strong modification from the Great Lakes.
Winters in Western New York are generally cloudy, cold and snowy...but
are changeable and include frequent thaws and rain as well. Snow
covers the ground more often than not from Christmas into early
March, but periods of bare ground are not uncommon. Over half of
the annual snowfall comes from the “lake-effect” process
and is very localized.
Spring comes slowly to the Buffalo area. The ice pack on Lake Erie
does not usually disappear until mid April and the lake remains
chilly through most of May. Fortunately, the cool lake waters act
as a strong stabilizing influence, so areas near the lake shore,
including the city of Buffalo, experience more sunshine and fewer
thunderstorms than inland areas.
Summer is pleasant in the Buffalo area. Sunshine is plentiful,
temperatures are warm, and humidity levels are moderate. Rainfall
is adequate, but it shows an overnight maximum, so it is seldom
a problem for outdoor activities. There usually are periods of
uncomfortably warm and humid weather during summer, but an average
of only three 90 degree readings makes conditions more bearable
than at most other locations. Overall, Buffalo has the sunniest
and driest summers of any major city in the Northeast, with enough
rain to keep vegetation green and lush.
Autumn on the Niagara Frontier is pleasant, but rather brief. September
is usually quite tame, as is much of October. The first frost can
be expected in late September over interior sections, but not until
mid October in the Buffalo metro area. During some years, the warm
Lake Erie water can extend the growing season into early November
adjacent to the lake shore. Cold fronts from Canada become common
in late October, and as the cold air passes over the warmer Great
lakes, cloud cover increases drastically. This heralds the start
of the Lake-Effect season. The first measurable snow usually occurs
in mid November, but snow cover is sporadic until mid December.
However, many of Buffalo’s greatest snowstorms have occurred
in late November and early December, due to the lake-effect phenomenon.
(From the National Weather Service)
Weather
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