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Canadian Coast Guard
<% else %>Welcome Aboard
The bitter Atlantic winter weather can bring harsh challenges for ships navigating on the east coast of Canada. Two metre thick ice and six metre high ridges are common off the north-east coast of Newfoundland and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
The Saint Lawrence River has its own hazards, such as batture ice - large sheets of consolidated floes that can be dislodged from the shore, endangering any shipping in the area and forming a jam where flooding can occur.
The Arctic and Hudson Bay are accessible for only six months of the year, leaving a very short navigation season for the resupply of Northern settlements and military sites.
- Who we are and what we do
- Icebreaker Service Dates
- Ice Offices
- Service Standards
- The Icebreaking Fleet
- Photo Gallery
- Publications
- How To Contact Us
- Ice Development
- Technical Terms
- Links of interest
Some documents and publications are in PDF format and require the Adobe Acrobat Reader to be viewed properly. It can be downloaded from the Adobe download page.
For questions, comments or suggestions, contact us.
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