Freighter finally free from Lake Erie ice after days of immobility
The Great Lakes have seen a noticeable jump in ice coverage from this month's cold snap, which has had positive and negative side-effects.
For folks in Ontario snowbelt regions clamouring for an end to the lake-effect machine, the increase in ice is a positive step towards that.
DON'T MISS:
However, amidst the expanding ice coverage on Lake Erie, the Manitoulin, a 201-metre cargo freighter with 17 people aboard, became beset by ice on Wednesday on its way back to Canada after dropping off a load of grain in Buffalo, N.Y.
#News - @USCG amplifies its response to M/V #Manitoulin today.#USCG AIRSTA #Detroit and Cutter Neah Bay (WTGB 105) arrived on-scene this morning to assist with the ice operations and overflights to monitor the situation.To read more, click below:https://t.co/mu9ohOMfHm pic.twitter.com/CCqMMb8Xsw
— USCG Great Lakes (@USCGGreatLakes) January 25, 2025
But even that story comes with good news.
After multiple attempts to free the tanker from the ice over the course of the days since then, the American and Canadian coast guards successfully dislodged the Manitoulin from its stationary position on Saturday.
While there are 17 people aboard the freighter, there were no injuries and never any concern for their safety, according to the U.S. Coast Guard District 9. The ship didn't suffer any damage as a result.
Some more close up video of the stuck 663 foot Manitoulin freighter about a mile off of downtown Buffalos coastline. pic.twitter.com/HBM09vm5G0
— BuffaloWeather (@weather_buffalo) January 25, 2025
Once freed, the Manitoulin freighter travelled alongside the U.S. Coast Guard for several kilometres until it reached open water.
As of Saturday, Jan. 25, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported that 24.1 per cent of the Great Lakes were covered by ice. The region's normal ice coverage is about 24 per cent by this point in January. Lake Erie is now up to 86 per cent ice cover––its highest since 2022.
That is a serious recovery given the month began with an ice coverage median of just approximately one per cent.
Thumbnail courtesy of United States Coast Guard District 9/@USCGGreatLakes/X.
With files from Nathan Howes, a digital reporter at The Weather Network, and Tyler Hamilton, a meteorologist at The Weather Network.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Simple hacks that will level up your camping game
It's camping season, and once you get your tent set up, it's time to roast marshmallows by the campfire. Here are some simple hacks to make yourself more comfortable! Is the ground too uneven to comfortably sit in your chair? Tennis balls can fix that! Simply cut a hole in your tennis balls and place them over the bottoms of your chair to help even things out. SEE ALSO: Instead of buying bags of ice to keep your items cold in the cooler, just fill up a bottle of water and throw it in the freezer overnight before you head out. It will keep everything cold and give you extra drinking water! You'll also never regret bringing an emergency poncho with you, just in case. Are you camping in the rain and having to dry everything? It can take forever for towels to dry, but a microfiber towel can dry things off without taking long for itself to dry. Having a dedicated water-proof bag will also keep your belongings nice and dry. Bug spray is also great to have, but a coil uses smoke to keep the mosquitos away! Check out the video above as The Weather Network's Nathan Coleman shows off how these camping hacks can up your game this summer. Copyedited by Anika Beaudry, a digital journalist at The Weather Network. Thumbnail image taken by Nathan Coleman/TWN.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sunny and warm weather today, rain chances increase into Sunday.
LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) — Mostly sunny skies are in the forecast however wildfire smoke will still be lingering across most of the area. Today will most likely be the pick of the weekend as high pressure remains in control of our weather. Skies start mostly sunny, with the smoke and haze from the Canadian wildfires, temperatures will be in the upper 70s. Eventually, clouds increase this afternoon and evening ahead of our next weather system. It looks like this system stays to our south but might clip close to the Stateline, Jackson and Hillsdale could see a shower or two late tonight into Sunday morning. Partly to mostly cloudy skies continue for most if not all of Sunday, temperatures remain warm into the mid 70s area wide. A cold front moves in late Sunday into Monday, this will be the best chance for most of Mid-Michigan to see widespread showers and even rumbles of thunder. Scattered showers and storms continue into Monday and even Tuesday as this low pressure system moves out of the Great Lakes. Temperatures warm back up by the middle of the week into the upper 70s to low 80s. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Smoke expected to lift in northern Michigan, but more could be on the way
A smoky haze settled over Traverse City, as seen from the top of Copper Ridge Drive on June 26, 2023. Smoke caused poor air quality and hampered visibility across northern Michigan. (Photo: Ed Ronco/IPR News) This coverage is made possible through a partnership between IPR and Grist, a nonprofit environmental media organization. Canadian wildfire smoke that blew into the Great Lakes region is expected to clear from northern Michigan this weekend — at least for now. The Michigan Air Quality Division said Thursday morning that the heavy smoke across the Upper Peninsula was already clearing out. Earlier in the week, there were unhealthy levels of fine particulate matter in the air across parts of the Upper Peninsula and northern Michigan, with smoke settling here for days before moving further south. While division forecasters expect Friday to be the last day for advisories from this round of smoke, they said it was too early to put out a firm forecast much beyond that: 'There is still a considerable amount of smoke in Canada and the models are indicating a late weekend frontal system could draw down more smoke, next week.' The state has been issuing air quality alerts for much of the region. As of Thursday, there were still advisories across the Lower Peninsula for sensitive groups, including people with health issues like asthma. People can take measures to protect their health, such as limiting outdoor activities, closing windows, and running air conditioners with high-quality filters. This is the latest in a series of intense wildfire seasons fueled by dry conditions in Canada, resulting in smoky springs and summers in the Midwest. 'For the last few years, you've combined what has been somewhat persistent wildfire problems in Canada with an air flow that is moving some of that air from Canada down into the United States,' said Jim Keysor, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Gaylord. It can be difficult to predict how far-away wildfires will affect air quality in different regions, since smoke is influenced by factors like wind, pressure systems, weather fronts and geography. 'Wherever the wind blows, the smoke is going to go,' said Alec Kownacki, a meteorologist with Michigan's Air Quality Division. 'And at different levels of the atmosphere you can have differing wind directions.' Over the past week, low pressure systems funneled smoke from fires in the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba toward the upper Midwest. 'Along with that wind shift, a cold front came through. And what happens on the back end of a cold front — you have a lot of air sinking,' Kownacki said. Local weather patterns also have an influence. While rain can help improve air quality, the rain that swept across parts of the region earlier this week actually pushed smoke down toward the earth, Keysor said, making exposure more likely. 'It's actually helping to bring down some of that smoke that's higher up into the atmosphere, which normally would have been way up there,' he said. 'That wouldn't have bothered us a whole lot.' One positive, Keysor added, was that modeling for smoke forecasts has become more accessible in the National Weather Service offices in recent years. Their smoke forecasts are informed by state data. 'The programmers that were putting some of those models together began to look at that [smoke] parameter a little bit more and to make it a product that we could view more readily,' he said. The weather models they use are improving. 'We're able to see more of it than we used to.' The heavy smoke that was hanging across the Upper Peninsula and northern Michigan has now moved further south, including around Lansing. 'It's wreaking havoc for us down here right now,' said Kownacki, who is based there. Conditions are expected to improve across much of the state over the next few days, but there may be more smoke from the fires in the near future. The state Air Quality Division updated its forecast on Friday morning.