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Southern Manitoba saw a wild night of storms with monsoon-like downpours, unconfirmed reports of tornadoes and vehicles abandoned on flooded roads.
Nowhere was hit with more rain than Stonewall, just north of Winnipeg, where more than 250 millimetres had been reported by 3 a.m. Wednesday, according to Environment Canada.
A few kilometres northwest of there, Woodlands received more than 120 mm.
Winnipeg was drenched with 117 mm recorded at The Forks, leaving reports around the city of inundated basements, impassable streets and engulfed underpasses. And many other weather stations in the province reported over 50 mm, Environment Canada said.
The intense weather was spread across the south with wind gusts clocked at 130 kilometres an hour in the Deloraine area, in the southwestern corner near the Saskatchewan border.
Wind gusts in excess of 100 km/h were reported in several other places, with Brandon hitting 100 km/h and Winnipeg clocking a peak of 94 km/h.
There was also hail, ranging from the size of nickels to tennis balls in parts of Winnipeg, Sanford and Otterburne.

There were unconfirmed reports of tornadoes around Ste. Anne, southeast of Winnipeg, and Otterburne, just south of the city, and other possible tornadoes through much of the Red River Valley and the Parklands area on the west side of the province, Environment Canada says.
There were also numerous reports of funnel clouds, the weather agency said.
Manitoba Hydro says hundreds of power outages are affecting thousands of customers in the province.
The Crown corporation is bringing in addition staff to relieve firefighters and police in Winnipeg who are guarding scenes where live wires have fallen, it said in a news release.
