Consider this latest spring snowstorm a big, wet, sloppy kiss goodbye from winter.
We hope.
Another wintry blast buried northeastern Minnesota under more than a foot and a-half of new snow, disrupted travel and closed schools.
The National Weather Service says 22 inches of snow has fallen in the Lake County community of Two Harbors, with 20 inches at Lake Nichols in St. Louis County. The Twin Cities totals stretched from 5-11 inches.
Temperatures are expected to nick 50 by next week, short of the 60-degree temps normal for April in Minnesota, but a welcome respite from the winter without end.
One person was killed Thursday on I-94 near Hwy. 95. The State Patrol said Jonathon Pohlen, 16, of Houlton, Wis., died when his westbound car went out of control, crossed the median and collided head-on with an eastbound semitrailer.
With snow expected to taper by morning and road crews plowing throughout the night, the Friday morning commute should be less harrowing, according to transportation officials. "Unless the weather throws a curve ball," cautioned Kent Barnard, spokesman for the Minnesota Transportation Department. "People still need to slow down and drive down for the road conditions."
This latest onslaught of winter to barrel through Minnesota was part of a powerful spring storm system that wreaked havoc from the Rockies to the Rust Belt. Snow and ice closed highways in Colorado and Wyoming. Rivers surged beyond their banks after downpours in Missouri, Iowa and Illinois. Tornadoes caused scattered damage in Oklahoma.
Air travelers throughout the region faced delays and canceled flights. At Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, two dozen flights were scratched and others were delayed by as much as four hours.