ST. JOHN'S, N.L. -- From extreme pack ice to record-breaking snow, it's the winter that just won't let go across much of Newfoundland.
There are at least 230 centimetres of snow on the ground in Gander -- the town featured in the hit Broadway show "Come From Away" -- smashing the previous record for the same day in 2001.
More than 100 cm fell over the last five days -- almost as much snow as Toronto gets on average in a whole winter.
At least another 10 cm fell in Gander through Tuesday as another powerful storm was forecast to dump up to 75 cm in some parts of the weather-battered province.
"I can look out my living room window and my son's truck is parked in my driveway and I can't see any of his truck -- the snow bank is so high on my front lawn," said Gander resident Beulah Cooper.
She is one of several locals whose kindness to stranded international airline passengers after the 9/11 terror attacks in the U.S. inspired the story of "Come From Away."
"Thank God I'm not in need of anything outside the house."
Cooper said it's one of the worst winters in the 42 years she has lived in Gander.
Environment Canada meteorologist David Neil agreed it's all a bit much, even for hardy residents used to severe weather.
"It has just been a relentless week," said Neil, adding snow drifts at his own home in the area are above his head. "People are getting vehicles stuck.
"There are roads where two lanes are down to one lane, and three-lane roads down to two."
Southeast of Gander, the Avalon Peninsula and St. John's harbour have seen unusually thick, dense pack ice brought in by high winds over the last week.
Heavy clusters of sea ice also trapped a passenger ferry on its way to Port aux Basques, N.L., on Tuesday.
Darrell Mercer of Marine Atlantic said a sudden shift in conditions blocked its ferry MV Highlanders off Cape Breton with 209 people on board.
By Tuesday evening, the 200-metre-long vessel was freed after its sister ship, the MV Blue Puttees, arrived to clear the way through the ice.
"As the vessel was departing this morning, they didn't anticipate any issues...," he said Tuesday afternoon.
Gabrielle McGrath, commander of the United States Coast Guard International Ice Patrol, said recent surveillance flights over Newfoundland and Labrador have revealed a busy year for icebergs. The patrol was formed after the Titanic disaster in 1912, and works with Canadian partners to track icebergs in North Atlantic shipping lanes.
There were 37 icebergs observed on March 27, McGrath said. But a low pressure system of strong counter-clockwise winds dramatically shifted big ice originating from Greenland glaciers farther south down the eastern Newfoundland coast.
By March 30 there were 272 icebergs in those shipping lanes and there are now 455, McGrath said Tuesday.
"I've been working with the ice patrol for about a decade and I've never seen anything like this in my life."
It's a potential hazard for ships and offshore oil platforms off Newfoundland but will likely mean an excellent iceberg viewing season for locals and tourists, McGrath said.
The unusually thick sea ice has also meant several polar bear sightings around the province.
And on Monday, residents of Bell Island, northwest of the capital St. John's, plucked five trapped dolphins from pack ice and carried them to open water. A young humpback whale died, however, when no one could reach it in a nearby cove.
On Tuesday, Environment Canada issued several blizzard warnings and special statements for eastern and central areas of the island.
The Bay of Exploits was expected to get heavy snowfall and strong northerly winds that could bring gusts of 80 km/h over most areas and up to 100 km/h along the coast. Snowfall amounts were forecast to reach about 75 cm there, with the highest totals likely in the Gander area. It was under a blizzard warning, along with Clarenville, the Bonavista Peninsula, Terra Nova and Grand Falls.
Some flights were cancelled at the St. John's airport and many central region schools were closed or delayed their openings.
Similar conditions were expected to continue as the system was expected to stretch into Wednesday, after nearly 17 cm of snow fell on the St. John's area Monday.
On the bright side? Neil said sun and warmer temperatures -- "almost in the double digits" -- are expected later this week.