GREENFIELD, Iowa – Stalks of corn have sprouted around Greenfield, Iowa, as residents work to rebuild their community after a devastating tornado during the spring.
Home to about 2,000 people, Greenfield was hit by an EF-4 tornado on May 22, with peak wind speeds reaching 175-185 mph.
As the storm barreled through the town about 50 miles southwest of Des Moines, it also scattered corn from nearby farmland. Nearly two months after the tornado struck, young corn stalks have been spotted growing along sidewalks and roadsides.
“It’s kind of neat!” said Greenfield resident Wendi Rae.
Aside from being quite a spectacle, the corn stalks are a powerful symbol for Rae.
“It’s been really overwhelming since the tornado,” she said. “Dealing with losing a portion of our town and all the loss, heartbreak, and strain that comes with that. So when I noticed the corn stalks coming up all along the tornado path through Greenfield, it felt like that was a sense of hope and regrowth.”
‘MY WHOLE NEIGHBORHOOD WAS FLATTENED’: GREENFIELD RESIDENT RECOUNTS SURVIVING EF-4 TORNADO
The tornado that struck Greenfield became the strongest measured tornado so far of 2024, killing five people and injuring dozens along its 44-mile trek.
Corn is a signature crop of Iowa, which produces the most corn of any state, according to the State Historical Society of Iowa.