Truro News

Spring storm no surprise to Gander residents

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With each throw of the shovel, Natasha Ram couldn’t help but wonder what happened to spring.

As she cleared the driveway on Thursday, her daughter Selena Barnes was enjoying a snow day.

Having lived in Gander since 2009, Ram has seen her share of central Newfoundla­nd spring storms.

“So it’s more sad than surprising,” she said with a laugh, as earlier in May, she had been painting and working on her garden.

“But we live in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador so you expect this kind of weather.”

Roy Martin had also embraced spring.

The Gander resident had to take his snow blower out of storage to clear the heavy snow.

Having spent 10 winters in Gander, he wasn’t surprised.

“We didn’t have a bad winter, so it’s not that bad,” he said.

At Gander Internatio­nal Airport it was business as usual.

Ed and Leanna Flood were awaiting their flight to Saskatchew­an, which was reported as on time.

Thursday marked the Corner Brook couple’s 15th wedding anniversar­y.

“It certainly wasn’t a snowy one like this,” said Leanna. “It was a beautiful 20-degree day.”

They made the trip to Gander the day before to beat the forecasted weather.

To keep passengers like the Floods on time required a lot of preparatio­n on behalf of the airport staff.

Joey Hunt, field foreman at the airport, said it was two days of planning before the snow began to accumulate on the runway.

“As soon as the forecast said we were going to get (a large amount) of snow, we started gearing up, checking out all the equipment to make sure we were ready to keep the runway open,” he said.

Hunt said crews started clearing snow as soon as it started accumulati­ng at approximat­ely 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, and crews continued to work around the clock.

As of Thursday morning, the runway was still open and a crew of seven were working cleanup.

Saltwire Network’s resident meteorolog­ist, Cindy Day, said that while snow in May in Newfoundla­nd is hardly rare, the conditions for this particular storm were not so common.

The system that brought the snow developed off the Eastern seaboard of the United States, but then as it moved up the coast, hit cold air coming from the North, right over central Newfoundla­nd.

“The cold meeting that moisture doesn’t happen often,” she said.

Indeed, until yesterday, the record for snowfall on May 24 was six centimetre­s in 1965. Results were still coming in, but Day said the latest measuremen­ts indicated 33 centimetre­s at the airport in Gander, with between 20 and 30 centimetre­s on average for the area.

While there may be a few showers mixed with flurries on Friday and into Saturday, Day said the system had kept moving east, past the Avalon peninsula.

While many schools in central were closed for the morning, some were open for the afternoon, while others remain closed for the day.

 ?? SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? Grand Falls-windsor, N.L. resident Harold Mackey shovels snow in front of his house Thursday.
SALTWIRE NETWORK Grand Falls-windsor, N.L. resident Harold Mackey shovels snow in front of his house Thursday.

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