Claustrophobic? This N.L. trucker is waiting out the weather in his tiny cab - Action News
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Claustrophobic? This N.L. trucker is waiting out the weather in his tiny cab

Darren Dodge has a little microwave in the cab of his truck so he can cook himself meals.

Some people in Nain have been without heat since Sunday morning

It sure looks cozy in the cab of Darren Dodge's truck! He spoke with CBC's Here and Now via FaceTime. (CBC)

Wild, stormy weather has once again wreaked havoc on the west coast of the island and throughout parts of LabradorMonday. The stormy weather began on Friday and just hasn't let up.

In Port auxBasques, where the day's strongest gusts topped out at 139 km/h,DarrenDodge washoled up in his frosted-over transport truck at the Marine Atlantic ferry terminal.

"I'm used to it, it rocks me to sleep," he said of the wind from the cozy confines of his truck's cab.

He first arrivedFriday night and has been idling his diesel engine to keepwarm, running an inverter to power a small microwave when he needs a snack.

"It's not like you can get out and go for a hike anywhere unless you're wearing arctic gear," he said.

With all the blowing snow,sometimes he couldn't even see across the parking lot.

Dodge is waiting for for the next trailer to come across on the ferry. As of 7 p.m. Monday, the night's crossings from both Port aux Basques and North Sydney were cancelled, which means Dodge had another night in the truck ahead of him.

People in Nain without heat

Nearly 40 householdsin Nain have been without heat since 11 a.m. Sundayand relentless winds have kept flights in and our of the community grounded, meaning Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro crews can't get in to fix the problem.

Lisa Ivany, the community's recreation director, is one of those people and she's set up a warming station at the Jeremias Sillett Community Centre to get people out of the cold.

"I know that I need the heat and I need a shower and food, so if I need it, then those other people need it too," she said.

Lisa Ivany set up a warming stations for folks without heat in Nain. (Submitted by Lisa Ivany)

A spokesperson from the hydro company saida broken wire connecting to the main power line is the cause of Nain's outage and that most customers, save for those unfortunate 40, had their power back by 6:30 p.m. Sunday.

"Our crew is on stand by and ready to go as soon as the weather hold is lifted," the spokespersonwrote in an emailed statement to CBC News.

'Stupidly windy'

Alerts for a mixed bag of weather remained in effect Monday evening for various parts of the province. Snow squalls and high winds pelted the west coast of the island, while the Labrador coast hunkered down under blizzards from Makkovik to Black Tickle.

The Labrador City area braced under extreme cold warnings.

About 15 to 20 centimetres more of snow is expected for Labrador, with winds gusting between 80 and 110 km/h making for near-zero visibility and whiteout conditions.

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Schools in Corner Brook and Stephenville closed for the day, while other schools in the western, central and Avalon regions shut downfor the morning.

The high winds prompted Corner Brook to takeits public transit buses off the road.

"Port aux Basques was the big winner, or maybe loser, depends on how you see it, at 139 km/h. And they've been stupidly windy there for the last 36, 48 hours," saidJustin Boudreau, a meteorologist with Environment Canada'sGander weather office.

The wintry weather system started on Friday, persisting through Monday morning.

Warming stations in Port aux Basques

Port aux Basques Mayor John Spencer said it's been a hairy situation, with power for "several hundred people" knocked out since 7 a.m. Sunday and power bumps throughout the night.

A look at the weather warning map for Newfoundland and Labrador as of 7 p.m. Monday. (Environment Canada)

"We set up a warming centre at the local Lion's Club last eveningpreparing food, soup, sandwiches. Our transmission line went down and knocked that out," Spencer said.

"We set up another contingency to go to the town hall, we have an emergency generator there. Then the emergency generator died. So it's a combination of, when things are going bad, they really go bad."

Power crews were unable to get to the Rose Blanchestation because the roads were closed, Spencer said, amid "extremely, extremely dangerous and difficult" driving conditions.

As of 7 p.m. Monday, power was still out for a few hundred customers in the Port aux Basques area, with Newfoundland Power citing severe weather conditions as the cause for the outages. The company figured the lights would be back on by 10 p.m. Monday, according to itswebsite.

Environment Canada expects conditions to improve by Monday evening as the squalls dissipate and flurries minimize.

Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Katie Breen