A March-ending blizzard blinded the northwest corner of Minnesota with more than a dozen inches of blowing snow and winds topping 50 miles per hour Monday.
"It's blowing so hard it's hard to even tell how much we're getting," Marshall County Sheriff John Novacek said. "This month is going out like a lion."
Hwy. 1 from Warren to the North Dakota border was closed and the sheriff was requesting no travel amid reports of a semitrailer truck and two other vehicles stranded in the middle of the road.
"And those are only the ones we know of," he said. "So it's not good, let's put it that way."
Pennington County dispatcher Dave Carlson, one county to the southeast, said visibility in Thief River Falls was down to a block or two, but no injuries had been reported as winter-weary residents wisely stayed out of trouble.
"We'll see what happens with April," Carlson said. "March wasn't worth two cents."
A tornado was spotted in Yellow Medicine County and two incidents of damage were reported by police working southeast of St. Leo.
Forecasters were predicting a fresh 5 inches of snow by daybreak Tuesday atop more than a foot that fell Monday in and around Grand Forks, N.D. National Weather Service forecasters said winds will remain in the 20 mph range Tuesday after reaching 50 mph Monday.