The coldest weather to hit the Twin Cities in four years is slapping Minnesotans with a reminder of what a real winter is like.
For some it's just a little too much. Cars grind rather than start. Furnaces work overtime, if at all. Schools start late or cancel classes. And the thrill of snow and ice activities wanes except among the most diehard fans.
Tuesday's temperatures are likely to barely top zero, with maybe a mid-afternoon high of 2 degrees, said Shawn DeVinny, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Chanhassen. But first Twin Cities residents will have to get over the shock of a frigid morning with temperatures at minus 14 degrees, even lower in the outer suburbs, he said. To make matters worse, the windchill will make it feel like minus 28, if that, he said.
By midweek, temperatures will hit a whopping 10 degrees. They'll eventually make their way into the teens on Saturday and then to an almost balmy 30 degrees on Sunday.
Monday's brutal temperatures fell well short of the average high temperature of 24 and low of 7. Monday's high of minus 2 came at 12:20 a.m. while most Minnesotans were tucked under warm comforters. By 9 a.m., the temperature sank to a low of minus 10 with a windchill that made it feel more like 30 below.
"It was the first time in four years where we stayed below 0 degrees all day," DeVinny said.
And that meant about 900 calls to AAA because of cars that wouldn't start or tires that went flat, said Matt Hehl of AAA Minneapolis. "That's double the volume for an average Monday," he said.
Babbitt took the prize for being the most frigid community in Minnesota, with a temperature of minus 29 on Monday. Many outstate towns reported windchills that made it feel more like 40 below zero.