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Saskatchewan

Sask.'s recent tornadoes spark difficult memories for Regina woman whose car was flipped by storm in 1989

Saskatchewan has had nine confirmed tornados this year, including three just last week. The stormshave brought up difficult memories for one Regina woman.

Betty Urschel was caught in tornado near Cut Knife decades ago

A tornado sighting at Foam Lake on Wednesday, June 29. (Submitted by Tricia Kristjanson)

Saskatchewan has had nine confirmed tornados this year, including three just last week.

The stormshave brought up difficult memories for one Regina woman.

The very mention of the word "tornado" will cause panic for some. For Betty Urschel, it is a reminder of how she,her husband and her mother-in-lawwere inside a car that was caught up in atornado's destructive path on June 30, 1989.

"Every time there's a tornado warning, you relive it," said Urschel.

The trio were heading to Edmonton from Regina, but their journey came to a rather abrupt stop near Cut Knife, Sask., about 175 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon.

Urschel said they knew they were heading into a storm at the time.

"But it was just like a big wall of black that we were heading into. There was no sign of a funnel cloud that we could see. And then the winds got so bad, and then the dirt was starting to blow up onto our windshield."

They pulled the car over to the side of the road. But it wasn't long before the car started to roll.

WATCH |Sask. tornadoes are a scary reminder of 1989 storm for one Regina woman:

Woman shares 'terrifying' storm story from 1989

2 years ago
Duration 3:29
Betty Urschel was caught in a storm that flipped her car 33 years ago. With nine tornadoes in Saskatchewan so far this year, Urschel says she's been reliving what she went through.

"Then [the tornado]just literally picked us up and dropped us on the other side of the fence into the field," Urschel said.

The car landed on its roof, with all three passengers hanging upside down.

Betty Urschel's overturned car following a tornado in 1989 near Cut Knife, Sask. (Submitted by Betty Urschel)

"It's terrifying. When we first started to roll, as my window broke, I could feel the wet grass on my arm ... there's just a million things that go through your mind. You don't know if you're going to die or what's going to happen," she said.

"It's only a matter of a few minutes and it's all over. But it seems like an eternity when you're going through it."

Thankfully, the car didn't move again.

"Atone point we thought, OK, it was safe to crawl out. But we could only crawl out the passenger side of the vehicle."

When they stood up, they began to get pelted on the side of their heads with rain and hail, as the tornado continued past. The trio crouched beside the car until the storm passed them by.

"Then the sun came out and the winds died down."

Betty Urschel, along with her husband and mother-in-law, were inside a car that was caught up in atornado's destructive path back on June 30, 1989. (Submitted by Betty Urschel)

Army officers came to help the family, who had lost their suitcases when the tornado popped open their car trunk. It wasn't until onemonth later that they got theirsuitcases back, after a farmer found them while working in his field.

Urschel said she sustained a "big goose egg" on her head, and her mother-in-law dislocated her thumb.

When it was time to head home in a rented vehicle, Urschelsaid she had nightmares when she dosed off.

"I would suddenly see dirt coming up on the windshield and kind of jolt myself awake," she said. "I think we were all in shock and, you know, just praying for a safe ride home."

Urschelsaid that terrifying tornado incident hauntedher for a long time.

"In years to follow, when we were out, there was a couple of times that we were caught in our vehicles during a storm ... it did cause me a panic attack or two."

She said that over time, she learned to work through the panic and "live your life."

With files from The Morning Edition