'Monster' tornado destroys brick farmhouse in western Manitoba

More storms likely with 'very, very unsettled pattern': Environment Canada

Severe thunderstorms on Sunday swept through beleaguered western Manitoba — still recovering from storms earlier this month — bringing at least one tornado that a storm chaser called a "monster."

"I've chased a few big tornadoes here in Canada, [and] it definitely was one of the stronger, top three strongest, Canadian tornadoes I've seen," said Aaron Jayjack.

"I was terrified people were about to die from this thing. Thankfully, that did not happen."

Environment and Climate Change Canada confirmed a tornado touched down southwest of Rossburn — about 275 kilometres to the west of Winnipeg — around 8 p.m. The weather agency is also working with the Northern Tornadoes Project to look into reports of another near Roblin around 8:55 p.m.

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Jayjack was tracking supercells throughout the afternoon that struggled to turn into anything more until the evening, when one "went very, very, very fast from nothing to a violent tornado in … less than an hour or so."

The first swirls of dust began about three metres away from him, just south of Birtle, southwest of Rossburn. Within 10 minutes, "it peaked into a pretty big monster tornado," Jayjack said.

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"I tracked it to the east. It was moving at a pretty good clip … towards Rossburn," he said. "I watched it fortunately miss a couple of homes, but then unfortunately make a pretty direct impact on a farmhouse."

Manitoba, Rossburn, Tornado, Storm, June 29, 2026. (Rossburn Fire Department)

A century-old brick home near Rossburn was heavily damaged by Sunday's tornado. The people inside were uninjured, according to a storm chaser who was first to reach them. (Rossburn Fire Department)

At that point, he halted his chase and went to the house to check on anyone inside.

"It was pretty heavily damaged. [It] still had some of its walls, but its eastern wall had come down and roof was missing. The rest of the farm was hit pretty hard as well," Jayjack said.

"Thankfully the people in that home were OK. We were able to get to the house and crawl through debris and check on them."

They had already called 911 and were waiting for emergency crews to arrive.

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Jayjack went to the next house, about 100 metres down the road, driving through downed branches and around trees.

"There was no one there, fortunately, but it wasn't damaged as bad," he said.

Tree, Tornado, Manitoba, Rossburn, June 29, 2026. (Rossburn Fire Department)

A tree was stripped of nearly all its branches after a tornado passed through a yard southwest of Rossburn on Sunday. (Rossburn Fire Department)

Jayjack estimates the tornado was on the ground for at least 20 minutes and left a trail of damage.

"From my experience, it looks like it's probably an EF3 (on the enhanced Fujita scale)," he said. "It wasn't your run-of-the-mill tornado."

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The Northern Tornadoes Project, a Western University-based lab in Ontario, is sending a team out on Monday to do an investigation and assign a damage rating, said Environment Canada meteorologist Shannon Moodie. More information will also be gathered about the possible tornado near Roblin.

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Once a preliminary assessment has been completed, Environment Canada will be able to provide more information.

Manitoba, Tornado, Storm, Rossburn, June 29, 2026. (CBC/Ethan Bezan)

A member of the Inglis Fire Department walks down a road off of Highway 83, passing damaged trees after a severe storm on Sunday. (Submitted by Ethan Bezan)

The storm also brought quarter-sized hail to the Shell Valley area and wind gusts between 89 km/h around Shoal Lake and 100 km/h near Somerset, Moodie said.

More active weather is forecast for Monday.

"All the overnight stuff is quieting down, but it'll reinvigorate this afternoon and through the evening," she said Monday morning.

"It's a very, very unsettled pattern right now."

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Storms and flooding this month in western and southern Manitoba have damaged hundreds of homes and forced some to evacuate.

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People were stranded on rooftops after flash flooding in the municipality of Swan Valley exactly three weeks ago, while a local state of emergency was declared in the neighbouring municipality of Minitonas-Bowsman due to flooding.

The areas saw washed-out roads and bridges, lengthy power outages and boil water advisories.

Two days later, storms in Winnipeg and the surrounding region produced two tornadoes and left a trail of destruction that included floods, downed power lines and trees, and thousands of damaged vehicles from hailstones that ranged in size from nickels to baseballs.

Manitoba Public Insurance has received more than 25,000 vehicle damage claims due to the June 9 storm.

This article, originally published by CBC News on June 29, 2026, was written by Darren Bernhardt with files from Meaghan Ketcheson.