Brace yourself.
After digging out from one of the biggest snowfalls this season, Minnesotans woke up Friday to delayed school starts, canceled airline flights, slick roads and a nasty morning commute. And another round of frigid temperatures will smack Minnesotans in the face.
"We may struggle to get above zero late next week," said Chris Franks, meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Chanhassen. "Wednesday night we could be into double-digit cold at minus 15. We're could be running 30 to 40 degrees below normal. It will be the coldest we've seen this winter in terms of how much it is below normal."
And there's no real relief in sight.
"We're going to be pretty cold through mid-March," he said. "It's not going to be January-cold because the sun just gets too powerful in March. But the problem is we have about 2 feet of snow on the ground so we have a lot of work to do to get back up to near normal or above normal. By mid-March, there are a lot of years we have dirty snow or brown ground."
Not this year.
Thursday's storm looked to dump 10 inches or more of heavy, backbreaking snow in some areas of the west metro and close to a foot in the east metro, Franks said.
Travel likely will be challenging Friday morning, said Kevin Gutknecht, Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) spokesman. Some roads still will be snow-covered, and falling temperatures and gusty winds will make for slick spots even after crews worked through the night, he said.