WEATHER ALERT

Cleanup ‘staggering’ as severe storm slams Whiteshell, Kenora

Chainsaws buzzed around Darren James on Tuesday while seasonal residents cleaned up and assessed damage from a severe storm that hit part of Whiteshell Provincial Park one day earlier.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Chainsaws buzzed around Darren James on Tuesday while seasonal residents cleaned up and assessed damage from a severe storm that hit part of Whiteshell Provincial Park one day earlier.

Broken or uprooted trees fell on James’s trailer and cabana, flattened a storage shed and destroyed septic tanks when the storm rumbled through Whispering Pines campground, just west of the Manitoba-Ontario boundary, Monday afternoon.

“There were probably between 30 and 40 trees broken just on my site here. It’s a real mess,” James said while he took a break from the cleanup. “The work in front of everybody out here for the next weeks and months, it’s staggering to know how much there is to do out here. It’s just changed everything.”

Broken or uprooted trees fell on Darren James’ trailer when a severe thunderstorm hit Whispering Pines seasonal campground in Whiteshell Provincial Park Monday. (Supplied)

Broken or uprooted trees fell on Darren James’ trailer when a severe thunderstorm hit Whispering Pines seasonal campground in Whiteshell Provincial Park Monday. (Supplied)

The storm caused flash flooding and power outages, and prompted a tornado warning in Kenora and cottage areas in northwestern Ontario.

James, who lives in Winnipeg, wasn’t at Whispering Pines when the storm hit. He felt emotional when he arrived Monday and saw the extent of the damage.

“We’ve done a lot of renovations. When we left Sunday afternoon I looked back and thought, ‘Wow, does it ever look good. We’ve come a long way,’” he said.

“When we got here (Monday), it was just unfathomable how much destruction there was. In the grand scheme of things, we’re somewhat lucky because it could have been way worse.”

James said he’s grateful for fellow seasonal campers at Whispering Pines, who’ve been helping their neighbours in the aftermath of the storm.

“Everyone is running around from site to site today to get the damage cleaned up,” he said. “I’m really grateful for the whole group of friends out here. I couldn’t have done this by myself.”

Environment Canada meteorologist Chloe Katsademas said pea- to marble-sized hail was reported near Rennie, while loonie-sized hail and 94 millimetres of rain were reported in Kenora.

The Northern Tornadoes Project is investigating wind damage in the Kenora area.

Damage caused by fallen trees after severe thunderstorm hit Whispering Pines campground. (Supplied)

Damage caused by fallen trees after severe thunderstorm hit Whispering Pines campground. (Supplied)

James’s Winnipeg home and his pickup truck were damaged during a hail storm in mid-June, two years after his roof had to be redone and vehicles fixed following a similar storm.

“The hits keep on coming.”

“The hits keep on coming. That’s two new roofs in three years for us, and now this out here,” he said. “You kind of think maybe we’re done with all the bad luck.”

The mid-June storm flooded streets and basements, and led to more than 24,000 damage claims to Manitoba Public Insurance, mostly due to hail.

Winnipeg city council’s executive policy committee approved a motion Tuesday to seek disaster financial assistance from the provincial government. The extent of damage to city property was unclear.

The city will ask that residents and businesses be allowed to seek financial aid, if eligible. It was not known how many were affected.

The province launched a disaster aid program in response to heavy rain in western and southern Manitoba in June. Severe flooding occurred in several communities, including Dauphin, Swan River, Stonewall and Ashern, while large areas of farmland were inundated.

Members of the Canadian Armed Forces and volunteers from disaster aid organizations are assisting recovery efforts in western Manitoba’s Parkland region.

Fallen trees on a building Whispering Pines campground after a storm on Monday. (Supplied)

Fallen trees on a building Whispering Pines campground after a storm on Monday. (Supplied)

The Manitoba Emergency Management Organization has received about 1,800 DFA applications from individuals and organizations, a spokesperson said. The total value of the claims is not yet available. The province has provided more than $6 million in advances to municipalities.

Municipalities continue to assess damaged roads and other infrastructure before submitting disaster assistance claims to the province.

“It will be into the fall before we get a final tally about what went on and what had to be repaired. It’s a long process,” said Wes Taplin, reeve of the Rural Municipality of Rockwood, north of Winnipeg.

Frequent rainfall hasn’t helped.

“We seem to be getting rain just about every third day. For the farmers, nothing is drying up,” Taplin said.

Meanwhile, flood preparations continue in some western communities, including Brandon, Minnedosa and Sioux Valley Dakota Nation.

About a dozen City of Brandon workers and volunteers built a sandbag dike across Dave Barnes’s driveway to protect his home from the rising Assiniboine River, which is expected to peak between July 11 and 15.

Measuring 0.6 metres (two feet) high, the sandbag dike seals a gap in a clay berm that Barnes had built around his home on the east side of Brandon in 2017, after significant floods in 2011 and 2014. He was appreciative of the help.

Damage from broken or uprooted trees after a severe thunderstorm in Whiteshell Provincial Park Monday. (Supplied)

Damage from broken or uprooted trees after a severe thunderstorm in Whiteshell Provincial Park Monday. (Supplied)

“I’m feeling very optimistic. The city has been so supportive and they’re on top of it here,” Barnes said. “When I came to Brandon in 1979, I was immediately struck by the volunteer attitude and reality of this community. It’s a city, but it maintains the small-town desire to pitch together and volunteer. I love my city.”

His Rosser Avenue East home is within city limits but outside of Brandon’s diking system, which has been closed or topped up in some spots. The province has projected a peak of up to 360.7 metres, below the record of 361.28 metres in 2014.

Barnes said he expects water to infiltrate his basement. His home is about 400 metres from the Assiniboine.

“It’s starting to get wet down there, but in full flood, when the ground water rises with the floodwater, the basement walls get leaky and I have to sump pump that basement out,” he said.

“I’m feeling very optimistic. The city has been so supportive and they’re on top of it here.”

“In 2014, we totally survived. I never had more than two inches (five centimetres) of water on my basement floor — kept it pumped out at all times — and now we’re prepared to do that again.”

Some areas were still without power Tuesday afternoon after severe storms hit southwestern Manitoba Sunday night and early Monday.

About 100 customers near Wawanesa had been without power since about 1 a.m. Monday, Manitoba Hydro’s outage map showed. Strong winds and trees took out power lines and poles.

About a dozen City of Brandon workers and volunteers helped build a sandbag dike to protect Dave Barnes’ home from the rising Assiniboine River. (Supplied)

About a dozen City of Brandon workers and volunteers helped build a sandbag dike to protect Dave Barnes’ home from the rising Assiniboine River. (Supplied)

Hydro spokesman Peter Chura said the Crown corporation does not yet have an estimated cost for storm damage to the system this spring and summer.

It’s also too soon to say how rainfall in June and July could affect power generation.

“We are seeing our reservoirs start to recover from previous years of low water and drought, but we can’t predict what will happen the rest of the summer and fall, or how financial forecasts may be affected,” Chura said.

With files from Carol Sanders

chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca

Chris Kitching

Chris Kitching
Reporter

Chris Kitching is a general assignment reporter at the Free Press. He began his newspaper career in 2001, with stops in Winnipeg, Toronto and London, England, along the way. After returning to Winnipeg, he joined the Free Press in 2021, and now covers a little bit of everything for the newspaper. Read more about Chris.

Every piece of reporting Chris produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

History

Updated on Tuesday, July 7, 2026 4:26 PM CDT: Adds details

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Outreach centre rife with drug use, needles, but daycare, community members say safety concerns go unheard

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Preview

Outreach centre rife with drug use, needles, but daycare, community members say safety concerns go unheard

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Children at an Osborne Village daycare are routinely exposed to discarded needles, human feces and drug use, prompting growing safety concerns from parents, residents and business owners.

The concerns centre on Augustine Centre at River Avenue and Osborne Street, where SPLASH Child Care shares the building with Oak Table, a drop-in operated by 1JustCity that provides meals, wellness and addiction supports, along with programs that help people build skills, and secure housing and employment.

The daycare looks after 132 children, from just a few months old to age 12.

Lesley Massey, executive director of the daycare, said parents fear for their children’s safety.

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Today’s horoscope

Georgia Nicols 4 minute read Preview

Today’s horoscope

Georgia Nicols 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

MOON ALERT: After 12:15 a.m there are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions. The moon is in Libra.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

This is a momentous day for you because you can go after what you want. You’ll be forceful in all your communications. In fact, conversations with partners, spouses and close friends could bring about the very improvements and changes you want.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Fringe reviews #13: Achievement unlocked, levelling up

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #13: Achievement unlocked, levelling up

Free Press review team 9 minute read 12:35 PM CDT

Black Fish, East of Berlin, Green Grab, Rowena Riddle, On Tidy Endings, Saving the Station, The Taming of the Shrew, Nat King Cole, Where We Fly From Hospital Beds

Read
12:35 PM CDT

Mosque’s restorative justice program helps newcomers find their way

Josiah Neufeld 10 minute read Preview

Mosque’s restorative justice program helps newcomers find their way

Josiah Neufeld 10 minute read 10:13 AM CDT

The Masjid Bilal is a chunky grey building just off Logan Avenue surrounded by warehouses and railyards. It looks more like a bunker than a mosque.

But on a summer Friday afternoon, its green-and-white carpeted interior is humming with activity. Two men in white robes and flat woolen caps are seated on the carpet poring over a copy of the Qur’an. A few young boys dodge through hallways, poking curious noses into open doors. At the back, next to a table piled with prayer mats, two girls in hijabs share schoolyard gossip. In the kitchen, women are cooking up pots of rice and chicken for people who will soon arrive for Friday prayers.

The Masjid Bilal is a community hub for members of Winnipeg’s African diaspora as well as Muslims from many other countries.

It’s also home to the Bilal Community and Family Centre, an innovative, community-centred nonprofit that is meeting vital needs for newcomers in this city.

Read
10:13 AM CDT

Fringe reviews #4: The next boss battle begins

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #4: The next boss battle begins

Free Press review team 9 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

1-Man No-Show, Louis Riel, Book Lovers, First Vampire, Grimm's Fairer Tales, Mother's Secret, Naked Mennonite: Genesis, Short King, Summer I Turned Sparkly, Thor's a Dick

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Fringe reviews #16: I need an extra show

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #16: I need an extra show

Free Press review team 9 minute read 5:20 PM CDT

Filthy Fakespeare, Just You and Me, The Review, Serious Comedy, This Is, You Are Happy, Real Grilfriend, Push Your Wheelchair

Read
5:20 PM CDT