 The morning after the Great Blizzard of 2013, Boston Municipal crews know that now is not the time to sit down on the job. Crews are working tirelessly, trying to get MBTA stations reopened and roads cleared. The goal is to have as many services as possible restored by Monday morning. This is just an example of the hard work that's going on in trying to get this city back on its feet. If you look down the street here, you'll see this idyllic winter wonderland scene coming back into some sort of shape. For some, a blizzard like this brought back memories of the famous Blizzard of 1978, when the city ground to a halt for nearly a week. And we just checked on Memzell, and then came back, and then I got my cross-country skis and skied over to the river. Some crazy stories. My brother was standing on a car one day, didn't realize it. Somebody yelled out the window, get off my car! While some worked and others remembered, many took to the streets to get a closer view of the storm. Many Bostonians were out around the city, poking through the snow and enjoying the winter wonderland. The people around Fenway Park ran the spectrum from experienced winter survivor to first-time blizzard newbie. Going sledded. Where at? Over in Jamaica Plain, the Sugar Bowl. Okay. 36 years old. Why not? So this is something that happens. It's cool when it happens, but it happens. I mean, not really in the city, you know what I mean? So it kind of makes a difference. It's different in the city. We'll see it back home, but in Boston, I mean, you saw a guy pulling a sled up lands down, you know? Like, that doesn't happen a lot. It was so windy, I was getting blown away, and I've actually never been unable to walk before. So it was a little scary. Coming from California, I would never experience it. And with the blizzard of 2013 behind us, residents are finally coming outside to blow off a little steam. Here in Omri Park in Brookline, Massachusetts, we have people of all ages, students, parents, kids. Some going through their regular northeastern winter, some experiencing it for the first time. Having fun, sledding. There's probably one more day to get a little bit of enjoyment in before it's time to trudge through that Monday commute. Even though winter storm Nemo just dumped two feet of snow on Boston, snowfall in the region has declined over the past few winters. According to the National Weather Service, over the past decade, an average of 46 inches of snow has fallen per winter. That's down roughly two inches from the 1990s, when an average of 48 inches fell per winter. So when a storm like this hits the area, people take advantage. Do you have a hold of the Yeti? I have, probably. Bigfoot? I got size 15s before I put my snowshoes on. Nemo is no longer lost, having discovered a home here in Boston. The storm is over, the cleanup is underway, and the memories are being made. For BU News Service, this is Alexander Hyacinth.