Beautiful, dangerous winter.
The season quit kidding around and booted up Saturday to deliver two potent punches to much of Minnesota. First will come a storm carrying several inches of snow, followed by an invasion of arctic air the likes of which we haven't seen in more than 20 years, with windchills as low as 60 below.
Or, as Joe Calderone, a senior forecaster at the National Weather Service's Chanhassen office, put it: "Instantaneous frostbite."
For once, the Twin Cities is right smack in the middle of the winter storm warning zone. Starting Sunday afternoon and running into Monday, it will get 6 to 8 inches of snow — light, pretty stuff tossed around by winds gusting up to 35 miles per hour, the Weather Service said. Sunday's high will be 8 above, with a windchill of 14 below.
Saturday morning brought a prelude, with light snow making for tricky driving. According to the State Patrol, there were 423 crashes statewide between 8 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. — 46 with injuries and one fatality in Blue Earth. In addition, 106 vehicles spun out or veered off roads.
Sunday's storm will further test drivers.
"The Monday morning commute will be a challenge," said MnDOT spokesman Kevin Gutknecht. "The good news about this snow is that they're saying it'll be low-moisture, so there won't be as much compaction. Still, we can't say it enough — drivers really need to slow down."
Cities under the winter storm warning include Morris, Willmar, St. Cloud, the Twin Cities, Red Wing, Rochester, Albert Lea and Mankato, as well as Eau Claire and Rice Lake in Wisconsin. Communities to the northeast and southwest of that band will get slightly less snow, with northeastern Minnesota largely unaffected.