Sooooo, we’ve been having a bit of snow here in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Well, I can’t speak for the whole province, just for the Easterly island bit where I live but there is A LOT of here.

According to official measurements at St. John’s International Airport, 166.1cm of snow has fallen since February 1, 2026 but different areas in the metro region have probably had more.
Over the course of the month I have had to incorporate snow shoveling into my workout routine pretty regularly – turns out that an hour of snow shoveling is the equivalent of 8kms in my 2026 walking challenge!
Then, last week, things went up a notch when the snowbanks on the side of my driveway got so high that I could no longer shovel snow up there.
NOTE: We only have one ‘side’ of our driveway because our driveway and our neighbour-on-the-left’s driveway is connected and I’m not going to just start dumping snow on their part of our joint driveway.
Then, on the weekend, the day after my husband left on a trip to visit his brother, we had a storm that lasted from Saturday afternoon to Sunday night and dropped a ridiculous amount of snow on us – over 60 cms.
Here’s what my driveway looked like (from my upstairs window) when the storm stopped:

Normally, I am ok with shoveling and I sometimes even like it.
However, I do not enjoy shoveling when there is nowhere to put the snow.
I really tried to throw some up on the bank but half of it would tumble down.
I threw some of it closer to the house.
And I used my scoop to add to the pile of snow in the middle of my cul-de-sac.
After he finished his own driveway, a neighbour used his snowblower to clear along one side of my truck and to clear some of my neighbour-on-the-left’s driveway.
It took over three hours, even with my oldest son’s help (and my neighbour’s help), and every part of it was an exercise in frustration.
There was no satisfying rhythm of shoveling.
There was no sense of accomplishment – I mean, we obviously accomplished something…

But it wasn’t possible to clear a wide path to the house (see the lower part of the photo, it’s like a roofless tunnel) and, in fact, the path has packed snow at the bottom from us walking on it while trying to shovel so it feels even more annoying.
It wasn’t possible to completely clear or widen the end of the driveway and it is really challenging to back my truck in.
But, clearing all that snow has been a good workout – if you define good as ‘Uses muscles I wasn’t even aware of and leaves me really, really, really tired’ but I do NOT recommend it.
In fact, if you can get away with just doing fun stuff in the snow (skiing, snowshoeing, building forts), I think that would be the best workout plan.
The cursing while you try to shovel snow higher than your head routine is like something an evil fitness influencer would devise to sell to unsuspecting followers.
The only difference between this workout and the one an evil influencer would be trying to sell me on is the fact that I didn’t have to dress up or smile while doing it.


















