A stormy pall brooded over storied July 4th traditions in parts of Minnesota Wednesday, forcing some to trade parades for washed-out streets and others to swap sparklers for sandbags.
In the Twin Cities, some parades and fireworks were canceled as Mother Nature dropped a booming show of thunderstorms across the region. In Bemidji, officials were cleaning up downed trees, branches and power lines after being hit early Wednesday by what National Weather Service officials called an EF-1 tornado. And from Redwood Falls to the Iowa border, southern Minnesota cities scrambled to respond to rising waters seeping into businesses and homes.
"They don't need any more rain in southern Minnesota," said Michelle Margraf, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Chanhassen.
Murray County was the only county to request state assistance after 8 to 10 inches of rainfall fell Tuesday — double the amount of rain that typically falls the entire month of July.
By late Wednesday, the worst seemed to be over, with water receding in many places and cleanup beginning.
Tuesday and Wednesday's rain added to already saturated ground and swollen rivers and lakes from June rainfall.
South of Tracy, Lake Shetek received 8.6 inches of rainfall, mostly within two hours Tuesday, contributing to the lake spilling over its banks. The Redwood River rose 6 feet Tuesday in Redwood Falls and reached a record high level farther west in Marshall. And the Cottonwood River, which flows into the Minnesota River in New Ulm, is expected to reach major flood stage by Thursday.
As a result of the flooding, road closures continued across southwestern Minnesota.