Amber Scherf was working on some final wedding reception plans Sunday night as a storm rolled toward her parents' new home on Bone Lake in Scandia.
At first it seemed like your average summer storm, she said. But then she looked outside and saw the lawn furniture start to twist.
She huddled with her parents in the laundry room as a tornado, one of four to hit Minnesota Sunday, barreled through the neighborhood. When the family went outside to assess the damage to their home — built just four months ago — they found the screened-in porch in shambles and part of the garage door crumpled. A corner of the roof had been ripped off, allowing the high winds to bow a wall.
Scherf's first thought was about her wedding reception, planned for Saturday on the newly sodded lawn. But the tears didn't last long — a neighbor quickly offered to host it.
"It's what people always say in these situations, but we really are fortunate. No one was hurt and it could have been worse," she said. Not only that, the party was still on.
The National Weather Service confirmed that three other tornadoes, two EF0s and one EF1 (like the one in Scandia), touched down Sunday night in McLeod County, about 60 miles southwest of the metro area. Two more tornadoes left a path of destruction in Wisconsin: One near Luck, where many Twin Cities residents have lake cabins, and another near Barron.
But no injuries were reported, and most places saw little more than tree damage. EF0 and EF1 tornadoes are ranked the weakest on the Enhanced Fujita scale used to measure tornado strength.
The Scherf home was one of a dozen Scandia properties that saw significant damage in Sunday's storms. City and county officials, neighbors and dozens from tree removal companies were out Monday to move downed trees, rake up leaves and repair street signs that the wind had felled.