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Did Melfort's 100 km/h winds mess up your long weekend plans?

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That May Long weather was something else, eh?

## What's with all these winds in Saskatchewan?

Morning from the junction — here's what's moving in Melfort.

You know, the May Long Weekend is usually when people around here start putting in the garden or getting the boat ready for Codette Lake. This year, though, it felt more like a November gale decided to show up a few months early. We had winds topping 100 km/h in places, and it really messed things up for a lot of folks across the province.

Now, for us here in Melfort and the surrounding trading area, we're pretty used to some strong prairie winds, especially out on the black loam fields. But this past weekend was something else entirely. While the weather warnings covered a good chunk of Saskatchewan, it’s worth thinking about what this kind of severe weather means for our communities. It's not just about a few downed tree branches, though we saw plenty of those.

### What This Means for Melfort

* **Infrastructure Stress:** Power outages were a big deal. For a place like Melfort, with the rail line and the co-ops, even a short disruption can cause headaches.

* **Agricultural Impact:** Farmers in the Carrot River Valley would have been watching those winds closely, especially with early seeding. High winds can dry out topsoil quickly.

* **Community Preparedness:** When you hear about places like Consul and Radville dealing with the aftermath, it reminds you that being ready for these kinds of events is just part of living out here. It’s not just a Regina or Saskatoon problem; it's a Saskatchewan problem.

This isn't just about a bad weekend for camping. It's about how our towns, from Star City to Tisdale and Nipawin, are built to handle what the weather throws at us. We rely on those roads, those power lines, and each other to keep things running, especially when the unexpected hits.

Jack Lawson, MiTL Sports Desk.

You can get the full rundown on what this means for the province on the morning show — catch it live at mornings.live.

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →