Saskatchewan

Tornado dismantles metal storage building southeast of Regina

Canada’s first tornado of 2023 ripped apart a metal shed in Saskatchewan, tossing debris as far as three kilometres.

Debris from storage building was thrown as far as 3 kilometres

A red metal building torn to its studs with debris splayed in a field behind it
The metal storage building on Cole Zinkhan and Jennifer Kreklewich's property was stripped to its base by a tornado that tore through the area Saturday night. (Laurence Taschereau/Radio-Canada)

A family and their friends spent part of Monday cleaning nearby fields of debris in the aftermath of a tornado that stripped their storage building and spread its scraps over a few kilometres.

"That tornado ate it," said Jennifer Kreklewich, who lives on the property with her husband, Cole Zinkhan, and their two kids.

The damage to the property, about 11 kilometres southeast of Regina's city centre, is the only wreckage documented by Environment Canada from Saturday night's tornado. 

It's also the first tornado in Canada this year, according to Environment Canada meteorologist Terri Lang.

"Some people are saying, 'Is it early?' No, it is not early for tornadoes. We're in storm season now and everybody should be prepared," Lang said.

A metal shed with wood base is missing most of its roof
The exterior of the metal building was ravaged by the tornado but much of the interior contents were salvageable. (Laurence Taschereau/Radio-Canada)

She was uncertain how long the tornado was active, although storm chaser Craig Boehm, who was tracking the tornado, said it touched down shortly after 9 p.m. CST. He estimated it travelled about five to six kilometres during the approximately six minutes it was active.

The last recorded tornado in Saskatchewan was Aug. 4, 2022.

WATCH| Tornado strips storage building and spreads its scraps over a few kilometres: 

Tornado dismantles metal storage building southeast of Regina

2 years ago
Duration 1:49
A family and their friends spent part of Monday cleaning nearby fields of debris in the aftermath of a tornado that stripped their storage building and spread its scraps over a few kilometres near Regina.

No one injured by wreckage

Zinkhan was confused when his neighbour texted him Sunday morning to see if he and his family were OK.

They were at their cottage celebrating Kreklewich's birthday. It wasn't until his neighbour sent photos of his metal storage building that he woke up his family and packed to go home.

Debris is splayed across an open field from a large storage building that is near a pair of homes
A drone picture of the wreckage following the tornado. (Craig Boehm)

Kreklewich said while the exterior is basically gone, the items inside aren't as affected. Their homes, within 100 metres of the shed, are untouched.

The building is insured, Zinkhan said, but he is now in the process of going through the insurance claim.

"It's a pain in the butt, but deal with it as it comes, I guess," Zinkhan said of the wreck.

A woman in a pink zip-up sweater stands in an open field
Jennifer Kreklewich, with her home and the storage building in the background, says the shop is likely a total loss — but is happy the damage didn't extend to her home. (Richard Agecoutay/CBC)

Parker Schikowski, whose family is renting the nearby land to farm, said the incident hasn't delayed seeding and spraying much.

He said his land extends a few kilometres away and the debris reached it.

Tornado to be examined for severity

Environment Canada's initial assessment of the tornado was an EF0, the lowest on the "enhanced Fujita" scale, which rates the tornado based on the wind speeds, determined by the damage it causes.

"A lot of people think it's the size of them and that's not the case — so if they don't hit anything, we can't rate them," Lang said.

The rating was assigned before Environment Canada was aware of the damage to Zinkhan's farm. Lang said surveyors were headed to the site on Monday afternoon and their examination could change the tornado's rating.

During the weekend, the Regina area was also hit by thunderstorms accompanied by heavy rain and spiky, golf-ball sized hail.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dayne Patterson is a reporter for CBC News. He has a master's degree in journalism with an interest in data reporting and Indigenous affairs. Reach him at dayne.patterson@cbc.ca.

With files from Laurence Taschereau and Richard Agecoutay