No.
The forewings of a canard aircraft suffer a higher wing loading than the rear wings so that near the stall the nose of the aircraft automatically lowers. That wing loading (when exploited sufficiently) will cause a sufficient pressure (and therefore temperature) drop at the tip vortices to form a temporary trail in certain atmospheric conditions.
When the XB70 was lost (by one of its tailfins colliding with a Starfighter chaseplane) it went into a flat spin and a complete cloud formed above the whole aircraft as it fell.



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