Matt Reinartz is among the winter weary who woke up Tuesday to an April snowstorm and said: "Enough is enough."
The daylong snowfall slowed commutes, sent hundreds of cars skidding and forced folks back into their boots and winter down. But mostly the 8-plus inches of new snow and temperatures that barely eked above 30 broke the spirits of those yearning for spring and the 50-degree temperatures that are normal for this time of year.
"I woke up and said, 'Not again,' " said Reinartz, who found respite in the gardens at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory, where he works.
He wanted to drink in the color of tulips, feel a bit of spring warmth and smell the earth.
As the storm hung over the state, Minnesotans groused and shuddered on social media, at bus stops and in line for a hot cup of coffee. Underneath it all was a subtle boast of being Minnesota tough.
By early evening Tuesday, the snowstorm made April the eighth snowiest on record in the state.
"We can survive this to get to the beautiful weather in the summer. … That's why we live here," said Sean Aronson, spokesman for the St. Paul Saints. "You just have to grind through it."
And adjust, said Lee Swenson, director of baseball at the University of Minnesota. Winter weather forced the Gophers' two-game road series on Tuesday and Wednesday in St. Louis to be canceled. And the weekend series against Penn State that was scheduled on the Gopher's home turf at Siebert Field was moved to Purdue University in Lafayette, Ind.