Icy conditions in the Delaware Bay has forced the cancelation of the departures for the Cape May-Lewes Ferry.
Saturday saw the early stages of the coastal storm set to hit the Delmarva coast on Sunday.
Christmas has officially arrived in Rehoboth Beach, and for the first time in two years, the city's holiday tree is standing tall without any setbacks.
 Multiple school districts on Delmarva are either closing or delaying openings Monday due to flooding and high winds from a coastal storm.
The Town of Ocean City is preparing for a powerful coastal storm expected to bring heavy rain, high winds, and moderate coastal flooding to the mid-Atlantic region beginning Saturday night and lasting through Monday, Oct. 13.
It remains quite cold for Delmarva today, and feeling even colder with the wind. Winter Storm Watch is in effect for accumulating snow later Wednesday into Thursday.
High winds continued to impact Delmarva on Sunday, bringing non-thunderstorm-related damage, including downed trees and roof damage in Laurel and Bethel, as gusts exceeded 60 mph. Peak wind speeds reached 67 mph in Lewes and Bethel, with Dewey Beach and Rehoboth Beach also experiencing strong gusts. A brief warm-up into the 60s accompanied rain, but a cold front is now bringing plunging temperatures, with lows in the 30s and wind chills in the teens and twenties by Presidents’ Day. Wind gusts of 40 to 55 mph will persist overnight. A developing coastal storm midweek could bring at least 6 inches of snow to much of Delmarva, with travel disruptions expected. The First Alert Weather team has issued Red Alerts for both the high winds and the potential winter storm.
Traffic on the Bay Bridge has been temporarily halted due to high winds.
