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Source: MetService

Covering period of Tuesday 11 – Thursday 13 April – Unsettled weather was the theme for much of the country over the Easter weekend, and is expected to continue for the next couple of days, thanks to an unstable airmass over Aotearoa. MetService has issued an Orange Heavy Rain Warning for Westland about and north of Aoraki/Mt Cook, as well as several Heavy Rain and Severe Thunderstorm Watches.

Monday had particularly active weather, with nearly nine thousand lightning strikes recorded over Aotearoa in 24 hours. Just over a third of those strikes were recorded in the Nelson region, with another thousand over the Bay of Plenty.  

MetService meteorologist Alwyn Bakker says, “Thunderstorms are also associated with damaging wind gusts, and we’ve also had reports of tornadoes, although they’re difficult to confirm without photo or video evidence due to their very localised nature.”

Thunderstorms are expected to continue today, with Severe Thunderstorm Watches out for Buller and Westland, as well as the upper half of the North Island. If severe thunderstorms occur, they could bring hail, localised downpours, and possibly tornadoes. Tornadic wind gusts can cause some structural damage, including trees and power lines, and may make driving hazardous. If any tornadoes occur, they will have a limited area of effect.

Heavy rain is also expected for parts of the South Island this week, with an Orange Heavy Rain Warning out for northern Westland, and Heavy Rain Watches for Buller, the headwaters of the Canterbury lakes and rivers between Lewis Pass and Mount Cook, North Otago and Dunedin.

There’s a bright spot on the horizon, however. The weather is set to improve towards the end of the week, as a ridge starts to build southeast of the country.

For media enquiries or to arrange an interview with one of our meteorologists please call 04 4700 848 or email metcomms@metservice.com

Understanding our Severe Weather Watches and Warnings

Outlooks are about looking ahead:

To provide advanced information on possible future Watches and/or Warnings
Issued routinely once or twice a day
Recommendation: Plan

Watches are about being alert:

When severe weather is possible, but not sufficiently imminent or certain for a warning to be issued
Typically issued 1 – 3 days in advance of potential severe weather.
During a Watch: Stay alert

Orange Warnings are about taking action:

When severe weather is imminent or is occurring
Typically issued 1 – 3 days in advance of potential severe weather
In the event of an Orange Warning: Take action

Red Warnings are about taking immediate action:

When extremely severe weather is imminent or is occurring
Issued when an event is expected to be among the worst that we get – it will have significant impact and it is possible that a lot of people will be affected
In the event of a Red Warning: Act now!

MIL OSI