Several tornadoes touched down near Walsh Sunday, and there could be more severe weather to come.

"We're actually looking for more chances for severe weather over the next couple of days in eastern Colorado. There's plenty of moisture here and systems moving through," said Tom Magnuson with the National Weather Service.

Damage included downed trees and power lines and broken windows, The storm was accompanied by baseball and softball-sized hail and 100-mph wind.

Magnuson said some of the tornadoes occurred just south of Highway 160 and a couple others west of Walsh in open country.

"I looked north and it was hairy-looking clouds," said Baca County Sheriff David Campbell. "We have to sound our tornado sirens, which we did in ample time. We got a very good response out of the town. We also launched what we call a 'code red,' which is an automatic telephone call to the residents in the county.

"It wasn't two minutes after we did that we did spot two tornadoes north of Walsh. I was out on 160 right here by Walsh and one of the EMT weather watchers said we had a debris cloud. I head back to Walsh, I see the debris cloud go across the road right in front of me. In that field was first time in my life I've ever seen it, triplets."

Magnuson said two storms came together Sunday to produce the tornadoes.

"We had a boundary develop, kinda a front, from previous thunderstorms in the morning across Kansas that moved back into Colorado and this storm fired up along that boundary. This moved right along and achieved quite a spin and moved down into Baca County. ... Two storms came together right in this area and that really sent it over the edge and so we did have a number of small tornadoes in the Walsh area."

The National Weather Service said the tornado was an EF-1.

Walsh is three and a half hours southeast of Colorado Springs, not far from the Kansas state line.