TUESDAY night's 4-1 Coca-Cola League One victory over Brighton & Hove Albion at Carrow Road made it five consecutive wins on home soil as City moved up to fourth in the League One table.
Following last night's success, City left-back Adam Drury admitted that Carrow Road was now starting to have a real fortress feel to it once again.
"It's nice, obviously home form is key and we want to keep picking up results to get us up the table," said the long-serving defender.
"We've set our stall out at home and teams are now coming here trying to stop us from playing and changing the way they play but we are breaking them down. It is not always going to be big scorelines but we are breaking them down."
City got the match off to the best possible start as Grant Holt chipped City into the lead inside the opening three minutes. After finding themselves a goal behind so early on, the Seagulls had little option but to open up and look for a way back into the contest.
"It made it a bit more of an open game with us scoring early," confirmed Drury. "They then had to come out and attack us and to be fair to them they did which made the game interesting but we kicked on and got the goals to finish off the game."
With just one defeat in 14 league and cup games, Paul Lambert's Canaries find themselves just four points off Charlton Athletic who occupy second place and Drury says pushing on to those top two places is the number one priority at Carrow Road.
"That's the aim, we want to get promoted as simple as that. We are going the right way about it at the minute but as the gaffer says there is a long way to go yet and we've got to keep doing what were are doing and only worry about what we do."
Watch the full interview with Adam Drury, along with Jens Berthel Askou on Canaries Player plus manager Paul Lambert's post-match interview and the first words from Russell Martin as a City player following his loan move.
Tuesday night's game saw Holt, Wes Hoolahan and Chris Martin all on the scoresheet once again. The trio have now scored 35 goals in all competitions for City this season and having such a prolific frontline is proving a real boost for the whole team.
"They are causing havoc for anyone we play against and it's our job to just get them the ball and let them go and do their thing which is what they are doing. I don't think anyone likes playing against them which is a big plus for us."
Although the goals are flowing freely among the City squad, Drury is one player who has yet to find the net this season. After his 304 appearances for City to date have yielded just three goals, the ever-reliable Drury is not a player known for his prowess in front of goal and he has started to take a bit of stick from his team-mates for the lack of a goal during the current campaign.
"It does get mentioned!" laughed Drury. "I'm happy that the other lads are scoring but hopefully I'll get a few goals this season. But we're winning games and that's all I really care about."
Having been part of successful Norwich teams in the past, Drury said confidence was once again sky-high among the current City squad.
"If you are winning games it breeds confidence. At the minute everyone is very, very confident but as I said there is an awful long way to go yet so we're not getting carried away.
"We've got to make sure we keep making Carrow Road a hard place for teams to come to and then if we can pick up points away then it's a big bonus."