Minnesota
Minnesota weather: Humid and windy Sunday with chances of isolated thunderstorms
(FOX 9) – The top of the weekend will likely be heat and humid, but it surely will not hold round heading into the workweek as a return of seasonable temperatures is anticipated.
Sunday’s highs will attain the higher 70s like Saturday, however humidity ranges will rise, leaving it feeling moderately humid and summer-like, particularly for the top of October.
Winds will even be a lot greater on Sunday, gusting 35 to 45 mph at occasions, blowing off lots of the leaves which are nonetheless hanging round. Temperatures will prime out within the mid to higher 70s within the Twin Cities and can barely cool this night as our heat air mass hangs round just a bit longer.
A chilly entrance is anticipated to reach late this night and spark some remoted storms in southwestern Minnesota after sundown. The system will roll northeastward late this night and into tonight. The storms will likely be hit and miss, so many possible will not see any rain, however a few of us will get fortunate.
The storms will likely be transferring by way of a unstable air mass, so a few these may pack a punch with sturdy gusty winds and quarter-size hail. Many of the state is underneath a degree 1 advisory for a marginal danger of extreme climate. Southwestern Minnesota is underneath a degree two advisory for a slight likelihood of extreme storms.
The chilly entrance ought to transfer by way of the Twin Cities round or simply after dawn Monday, pushing temps again to the 50s by noon. The temperatures will hover by way of the afternoon because the gusty breezes hold round till sundown.
After Monday, a far calmer and extra typical week of climate for this time of yr is anticipated.
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Minnesota
ATV riders shell out millions riding northern Minnesota trails, study finds
Survey respondents, who came from 63 different Minnesota counties and 14 different states and the District of Columbia, were drawn by this region’s reputation.
“When we asked survey respondents ‘how did you hear about it,’ the most common response was via word of mouth,” said Brigid Tuck, lead researcher from the University of Minnesota Extension. “There is a positive reputation out there that is bringing people to this area.”
The findings could be used to leverage more money from the state and to make a case for more trail coverage in this region, according to Sen. Grant Hauschild, DFL-Hermantown.
“We need to make the case to other legislators from the Twin Cities, from Mankato, from other places that, look, your people own these licenses, they own these ATVs, and they’re coming to our region to utilize our outdoors and our land for their benefit,” Hauschild said.
Between 2005 and 2020, registrations for ATVs increased by 36%, according to the study.
ATVs have gotten a bad rap in the past, said Ron Potter, president of ATV Minnesota. He credits the development of organized ATV clubs with changing that. Ten years ago there were no clubs, he said. Now there are 70 in Minnesota.
Minnesota
The Minnesota Wild have made resilience a valuable habit, halfway through a banged-up regular season
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Wild wouldn’t need much time to identify a theme for their first half of the regular season — unfazed ought to do it.
In a fitting finish to their 41st game, the Wild reached the midpoint of the schedule in taxing fashion by fending off the St. Louis Blues 6-4 for their fourth straight victory on Tuesday night.
“Even if we’re up or even or down, I think we just keep playing,” defenseman Jonas Brodin said. “To do that, I think that’s really good. We’ve just got to keep doing it the rest of the season.”
Minnesota (26-11-4) kept pace with Central Division leader Winnipeg, staying two points behind the Jets with one game in hand. The Wild have the fourth-best record in the NHL, after missing the playoffs last season with largely the same roster. One key difference in 2023-24 was a lack of resiliency when injuries and slumps came their way.
“The vibes are high. Everyone’s feeling good,” defenseman Jake Middleton said.
With Brodin leading the way with a career-high 33:02 of ice time, the second-most by any player in the NHL this season, the Wild managed to outlast a late surge by the Blues with contributions from everywhere in the lineup.
Defenseman Brock Faber, the runner-up for the Calder Trophy last year for the league’s top rookie, departed in the first period with an upper-body injury. That meant more minutes for Zach Bogosian on the first blue-line pair with Brodin, with captain Jared Spurgeon sidelined by a lower-body injury.
Flanked by the second forward line of Marcus Johansson, Joel Eriksson Ek and Ryan Hartman down the stretch with a one-goal lead, Brodin and Bogosian were a two-man wrecking crew in front of goalie Marc-Andre Fleury during a supersized shift to end the game. Johansson’s empty-netter with 36 seconds left gave the Wild a 6-4 lead and a much-needed deep breath.
“That six-man unit to end the game was special to watch,” said Middleton, who returned from a 10-game absence due to an upper-body injury with a goal and an assist.
The defensemen combined for three goals and two assists. Brodin, who led the team with four blocked shots, was justifiably proud of the effort.
“It’s fun to be playing those situations, too, like when it’s on the line. I love to play those minutes. That’s what you dream of when you’re a kid, play those tight games and those shifts. I love it,” Brodin said. “You forget you’re tired when you’re on the ice.”
So what’s the recovery plan?
“I don’t know. Maybe order a pizza or something,” Brodin said.
Wild coach John Hynes had no update on Faber’s condition after the game, but Brodin and his blue-line boys will surely be ready for more role upgrades after the first half they’ve experienced. Brodin missed 10 games earlier this season himself.
Up front, star left wing and leading scorer Kirill Kaprizov is still out with a lower-body injury that has cost him six games and counting. Earlier this season, Eriksson Ek and another top-six forward, Mats Zuccarrello, missed 29 games between them.
“You can go one of two ways when you hit adversity, and we’re choosing to rise to the occasion,” Bogosian said. “That’s what we need to do.”
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