NORTHFIELD – Dazed and in shock, Patrick Winter gazed at a decade of work destroyed in an instant.
His family business, Red Barn Farm, was a thriving destination outside this college town 40 miles southeast of the Twin Cities, hosting weddings and serving wood-fired pizzas outdoors amid fields of corn and soybeans.
But a devastating storm that swept through southern Minnesota on Thursday night, with as many as six tornado touchdowns, exploded his 104-year-old barn and scattered it to the winds.
"You don't even know where to start," Winter said Friday morning, tears filling his eyes. "I'm just walking in circles."
Throughout the region, heavy rains poured down, floodwaters rose and strong winds and tornadoes left a trail of damage, hitting Rice County and the Cannon River valley especially hard.
The entire city of Morristown — population 988 — was without power and water, and about a dozen homes were uninhabitable, Mayor Kurt Wolf said. Widespread power failures were reported in Cannon Falls, where officials advised affected residents to stay with family and friends for a few days.
The Faribault Municipal Airport was a shambles, with more than a dozen hangars and about two dozen airplanes damaged or destroyed. Significant damage also was reported at the Stanton Airfield, 4 miles south of Randolph in Goodhue County.
Yet despite the severe storm damage, no deaths or serious injuries were reported anywhere in the region.