On a pastoral summer Sunday, it hardly seemed possible that a raging storm with straight-line winds in the 70- to 80-mile-per-hour range had blown through the metro area fewer than 48 hours earlier.
Except where trees still lay across streets and, in at least one instance, atop a car in Minneapolis.
A Minneapolis Public Works employee said Sunday that it was still "a mess" in eastern parts of south Minneapolis, and residents reported trees across the road in other scattered areas of the city.
The employee said there were still so many traffic lights out that the department had run out of temporary stop signs.
When the trees on public and private property lost in the storm are tallied, they will likely number in the thousands.
Officials in St. Paul said Sunday that the streets were mostly cleared of trees and debris to at least make them passable. Crews in both cities will work through the week on cleaning up trees and debris, they said.
Cities and suburbs are only responsible for clearing trees that block roads or are on public property. Homeowners are responsible for cleaning up trees and branches that fall in their own yards; limbs, trees and debris need to be hauled away because city and county crews will not pick it up.
As of 11:45 p.m. Sunday, 2,770 customers were still without power, said an Xcel Energy spokesperson, and Xcel crews and partners were working 16-hour shifts trying to restore it, with a goal of having all power restored by midnight.