SEATAC, Wash. -- Airlines canceled more than 6,600 flights this weekend as the blizzard hitting the East Coast brings major cities to a standstill.
Flights at Sea-Tac Airport saw fewer cancellations, about four dozen arrivals and departures were canceled on Saturday.
The bulk of Saturday's 4,440 cancellations are at airports in the New York City and Washington metro areas, according to flight tracking service FlightAware. Another 2,226 flights were canceled for Sunday. Those cancellations center on Philadelphia, Washington and New York, with airlines essentially shutting down all flights into those cities.
Bo Whe is traveling from China and Seattle wasn't on her itinerary.
"I was planning to go to New York to visit my boyfriend, now I have to cancel everything because I have to make it back to school before class starts," Whe said.
Whe was left to find a local hotel now that her trip has been cancelled.
One bit of good news: Saturday is the slowest travel day of the week. There were a little more than 22,000 flights scheduled to, from or within the U.S., according to FlightAware. That's about 5,000 fewer flights - and 400,000 fewer passengers - than Thursday or Friday.
"You got to plan ahead as best you can of course," Jim Hove of Dallas said. "But with 7-8 thousand flights canceled, how do you plan for it? How do you work around it?"
Hove chose plans B and C, starting his day out in Poland with a detour through Seattle. His final destination is Dallas.
"Keep your chin up, you'll get there eventually," Hove said.
By Sunday afternoon, however, the airlines hope to be back to a full schedule to handle the typical influx of business travelers at the start of the week.
Amtrak has also canceled or cut back on service. Several trains scheduled to depart Washington D.C. for New York City were canceled. There is also no service from Washington to stations in Virginia and the Southeast, according to Amtrak's website.
All major airlines have issued waivers for travel over the weekend, allowing passengers to rebook onto earlier or later flights to avoid the storms. The airports included vary by airline but include some cities in Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia all the way up the coast to New Hampshire and Massachusetts. As of late Friday night, American Airlines alone has issued waivers for 42 airports.
"You can't change it, just deal with," Whe said.
For those looking to cancel their trips, they need to wait until the airline officially calls off the flight. Airlines have been much more proactive in recent years about canceling flights, often doing so up to a day in advance. More travelers are impacted, but they aren't stuck waiting in airports. It also lets airlines restart the system quicker because they have planes and crews in place.