Manitoba

Spring blizzard, flood of century hit 15 years ago

The blizzard that spanked southern Manitoba and led to the so-called flood of the century hit 15 years go this week.

Snowmelt leads to so-called Flood of the Century

The tower at the Winnipeg airport is barely visible through blowing snow in 1997. (CBC)

The blizzard that spanked southern Manitoba and led to the so-called flood of the century hit 15 years go this week.

The snow started falling on April 5, 1997, then the winds picked up and the visibility plummeted.

Over the next 24 hours, the storm dropped as much as 50 centimeters of snow on the Red River Valley.

Flood scenes

Take a look at some photos of the 1997 flood from the City of Winnipeg.

Flood facts

Facts from the number of sandbags produced to the number of evacuations during the 1997 flood.

Every highway and school in southern Manitoba was shut down, planes were grounded, and vehicles were left abandoned in drift-choked streets.

Heavy, wet snow snapped hydro lines and caused the roof of the Sears warehouse in Winnipeg's North End to collapse.

Days later provincial officials dumped more bad news on Manitobans: the flood of the century was a certainty.

Many drivers abandoned their cars on the street when they became mired in snow during the blizzard. (CBC)

The blizzard more than doubled the spring runoff levels, raising river levels quickly as the snow melted.

It's quite a contrast from this year, in which the snowfall amounts were far lower than normal and record warmth brought an early spring.

Trees are budding about a month ahead of time and provincial officials are warning of a possible drought.