The severe weather from Halloween night may be over, but the impacts aren't. The conditions caused an iron scow to shift, after being lodged in the upper rapids above Niagara Falls for more than a century. It appears to have flipped and spun around.
People who have lived in the area their entire lives and those who travel from far away came to check it out.
"Goat Island has been one of my most favorite places to visit all of my life. When I heard about the barge, I had to come down here and see for myself," says Guy Lightfoot, Niagara Falls resident.
The story of the scow began well before Halloween's extreme weather. On August 6, 1918, a dumping scow broke loose from its towing tug. It became grounded in the shallow rapids with two men aboard.
Through what has been called "one of the most dramatic rescue efforts in the history of the Niagara River," the men were brought to safety, but the scow remained stranded.
Now what will happen? Niagara Parks officials say it could be stuck there for days, or it could be stuck there for years.