Many people are left picking up the pieces from Sunday’s storms across Saskatchewan.
Environment Canada warned Sunday afternoon about a severe thunderstorm outbreak across central and southern Saskatchewan including the possibility of tornadoes.
At one point in the evening, there were a dozen tornado warnings in effect.
The weather agency is investigating five reported touchdowns, including Gravelbourg, Radisson, Aberdeen, Meadow Lake, and the RM of Bayne near Bruno.
In addition to the tornado risk, strong winds and hail battered a wide swath of the province.
There were a few communities hardest hit by damage, including Gravelbourg and Estevan.
“The entire town is pretty much messy. There’s branches and leaves all over the place,” said Gravelbourg resident Mark Yim.
Yim said buildings in the community also suffered significant damage, noting one building had parts of the roof that blew off and landed on vehicles parked nearby.
In Estevan, photos posted to social media show golf-ball-sized hail that fell.
Debris is left on the streets at the corner of 5th Street and 12th Avenue after the roof lifted off the Soul Hideout building, causing bricks and the metal roof to fly and rain down onto the streets below.
The largest hail was in southern Saskatchewan. It ranged from quarter and toonie size up to 2 1/2 inches, larger than a golf ball, in Estevan.
Meanwhile, heavy hail south of Blaine Lake made it look like there was a snow-covered road.
“I am sure there will be many people looking at their roof this morning and calling their insurance companies, ” said meteorologist Brad Vrolijk.
He describes the storms as the worst of the season so far.
“These storms produced a whole bunch of severe weather. This was certainly the biggest outbreak this year in Saskatchewan.”
“The hail in Estevan was unusually large when you get above golf ball size that’s not a common hail size on the Canadian Prairies. A rarer event than we often see.”
-With Files From Brent Bosker and Discover Estevan