Monday 12th: Severe Gales, Snow and Storms
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These topics are a read-only archive and may be subject to out-of-date information.
For today's weather discussion head to: New Zealand Weather & Climate
These topics are a read-only archive and may be subject to out-of-date information.
For today's weather discussion head to: New Zealand Weather & Climate
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I believe this qualifies for the Action Weather category.Razor wrote:I can't remember any storm being this widespread and damaging!
-Power out in Auckland, Hamilton, Tauranga, many parts of the eastern South Island
- Snow enforced closures and buildign collapses reported in South Canterbury and North
- gales in Wellington
-severe gales and heavy downpours in Auckland, flooding in Taranaki
- Report of a tornado in Tauranga
- Grey River close to bursting in Greymouth
WOW!
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Almost 50 current power outages in the area covered by Orion:
http://www.oriongroup.co.nz/Default.htm ... rs/Outages
http://www.oriongroup.co.nz/Default.htm ... rs/Outages
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Now gone southerly here - just miserable, not spectacular at present. But it's been great - loads of sunshine last week, then a big NW blow - was walking south towards harbour last night with strong warm (for the time of year and day) wind behind, then the rain squalls later in the night.
Now the southerly has arrived I'll be happy to see a reversion to Michael's dreaded SW/WSW

Now the southerly has arrived I'll be happy to see a reversion to Michael's dreaded SW/WSW

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Hi,Razor wrote:I can't remember any storm being this widespread and damaging!
-Power out in Auckland, Hamilton, Tauranga, many parts of the eastern South Island
- Snow enforced closures and buildign collapses reported in South Canterbury and North
- gales in Wellington
-severe gales and heavy downpours in Auckland, flooding in Taranaki
- Report of a tornado in Tauranga
- Grey River close to bursting in Greymouth
WOW!
Razor, where did you pick up the report of a tornado in Tauranga?
Paul
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Fair comment, but it depends on your timescale. Ex-tropical "Giselle" in March/April 1968 started with Northland floods and ended with southern floods 2-3 weeks later - and did a little bit of damage in between!Razor wrote:I can't remember any storm being this widespread and damaging!
-Power out in Auckland, Hamilton, Tauranga, many parts of the eastern South Island
- Snow enforced closures and buildign collapses reported in South Canterbury and North
- gales in Wellington
-severe gales and heavy downpours in Auckland, flooding in Taranaki
- Report of a tornado in Tauranga
- Grey River close to bursting in Greymouth
WOW!
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Where are you from JP? Welcome to the forum anyway!JP wrote:What are the chances that the next front moving over invercargill now will bring colder southerlies and more cold rain \ snow?? The weather image I saw seems to show the isobars coming directly and deeply from the south..
Things should start to clear up in Chch tomorrow mornng thanks to some sheltering.
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drove around again, came across another microcarpa across another road.....which i had been on earlier...
recorded windspeeds of 63 knots (115kmh or so)with the car mounted anenometer up at the heads (800 feet altitude)
and 53 knots down on the west coast, hamiltons gap......lots of sand blowing....not beach weather...
recorded windspeeds of 63 knots (115kmh or so)with the car mounted anenometer up at the heads (800 feet altitude)
and 53 knots down on the west coast, hamiltons gap......lots of sand blowing....not beach weather...
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South West Christchurch Wigram / Halswell to be excat, we're going easy on the power bill this month so if I make some typing mistakes its cause its barely 10c insideFoggy Hamilton wrote:Where are you from JP? Welcome to the forum anyway!JP wrote:What are the chances that the next front moving over invercargill now will bring colder southerlies and more cold rain \ snow?? The weather image I saw seems to show the isobars coming directly and deeply from the south..
Things should start to clear up in Chch tomorrow mornng thanks to some sheltering.

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a news update for ya
Power slowly being restored in Auckland after blackout
UPDATED 4.20pm Monday June 12, 2006
Power was gradually being restored to Auckland this afternoon after a blackout brought the city to a standstill.
Though power was reported to be finally restored after about four hours at 12.40pm, Auckland City Council said an hour later that 80 per cent of the city was still without electricity.
At 2.45pm, power company Vector said power had been restored to most parts of Auckland except for Penrose, the Eastern Suburbs, Glen Innes, and Otahuhu.
The council changed earlier advice telling people to stay put. It said this afternoon that parents should arrange to collect children from school and employers should send staff home if they were able to in order to avoid rush hour congestion.
It said Vector was predicting all power would be restored by 4.30pm
Auckland mayor Dick Hubbard said questions had to be asked about why the CBD and 700,000 people should lose electricity through one section of power line going out.
"It would be appropriate to ask questions why and whether there is an unreasonable level of vulnerability," he said.
The storm sweeping up the country also brought heavy snow to the South Island. Mid and south Canterbury woke up to the first heavy snowfall of the season.
Schools were closed in Christchurch and Timaru and Christchurch International Airport was closed from about 8.30am.
Auckland City Police mobilised its district emergency management plan and the city council activated its emergency operations centre.
Middlemore and Auckland City hospitals cancelled all surgery and emergency departments were handling urgent cases only. North Shore and Waitakere Hospitals were not affected.
The fire service and lift companies released some people trapped in elevators.
Traffic lights
More than 300 sets of traffic lights were out in central Auckland and a Vector spokeswoman said Manukau was also affected, while police said the power cut stretched to Hamilton. Thousands of homes, businesses and shops were without power.
The blackout stopped trains on the Auckland network. Back-up systems came into operation and allowed limited services to operate, but one passenger, Jon Reeves, told nzherald.co.nz it took him 2 hours to get to work on a journey which usually takes 20 minutes.
A spokesman for Ontrack in Auckland said this morning: "We haven't been able to bring trains into Britomart station. Passengers have been discharged at Newmarket and the Strand and subsequent services have been scheduled to operate to and from there.
"An earlier ... failure on the Western Line, that disrupted services from 6am, was unrelated to the power failure. It has now been repaired."
Strong winds and a high tide were causing the sea to break over the causeway on Tamaki Drive. Some motorists were driving on the wrong side of the road to avoid the waves and traffic was backed up in the morning rush hour.
MetService issued a weather warning this morning saying high winds would affect the whole of the North Island while snow would continue but then ease in Canterbury.
A Vector spokeswoman said the cause of the Auckland blackout was a fault on the Transpower network. She said: "An earth wire has snapped and fallen across the 110 kv feeder from the Otahuhu substation.
"All efforts are focused on restoring power as soon as possible."
Transpower's Chris Roberts said 1000 megawatts of supply had been lost at a time on a winter's morning when close to 2000 megawatts would normally be used.
Transpower presumed the power failure was weather related but could not rule out a maintenance-related problem, he said.
Cellphone coverage was also affected in Auckland.
Police asked people in Auckland to only contact them in emergencies as they were aware of the weather and power situation. They said some drivers were guilty of "lunacy" in the bad conditions, doing U-turns and driving the wrong way.
The fire service said it had received around 50 calls by mid-morning, including some from people trapped in lifts in the Auckland CBD. Fallen trees and powerlines were also causing problems on the roads.
Auckland council said a number of its wastewater pumps were without power and asked people not to wash clothes or dishes and only flush toilets when absolutely necessary.
Mobile telephones should only be used for essential calls, the council said.
High winds caused the closure of Tauranga Airport this morning and a fallen tree closed the northbound lane on SH22 at Pukekohe Golf course.
Severe gales battered the lower North Island overnight bringing down tree braches and power lines on SH5 on the Napier to Taupo road.
Heavy rain is forecast for later today bringing flooding.
An oil spill, heavy rains and gale force winds have also combined to close State Highway 1 between Pukerua Bay and Paraparaumu, 50km north of Wellington.
Central police communications spokesman Chris Turner said roading contractors were attempting to clean the oil spill and debris from the road.
Despite the severe conditions Cook Strait ferry sailings had not been affected and flights in and out of Wellington Airport were still on schedule.
MetService forecaster Cameron Coutts said galeforce winds were expected to batter the country for the most of the morning.
The front would clear the North Island early afternoon and by tonight just showers and winds would be sweeping most of the country, he said.
Power slowly being restored in Auckland after blackout
UPDATED 4.20pm Monday June 12, 2006
Power was gradually being restored to Auckland this afternoon after a blackout brought the city to a standstill.
Though power was reported to be finally restored after about four hours at 12.40pm, Auckland City Council said an hour later that 80 per cent of the city was still without electricity.
At 2.45pm, power company Vector said power had been restored to most parts of Auckland except for Penrose, the Eastern Suburbs, Glen Innes, and Otahuhu.
The council changed earlier advice telling people to stay put. It said this afternoon that parents should arrange to collect children from school and employers should send staff home if they were able to in order to avoid rush hour congestion.
It said Vector was predicting all power would be restored by 4.30pm
Auckland mayor Dick Hubbard said questions had to be asked about why the CBD and 700,000 people should lose electricity through one section of power line going out.
"It would be appropriate to ask questions why and whether there is an unreasonable level of vulnerability," he said.
The storm sweeping up the country also brought heavy snow to the South Island. Mid and south Canterbury woke up to the first heavy snowfall of the season.
Schools were closed in Christchurch and Timaru and Christchurch International Airport was closed from about 8.30am.
Auckland City Police mobilised its district emergency management plan and the city council activated its emergency operations centre.
Middlemore and Auckland City hospitals cancelled all surgery and emergency departments were handling urgent cases only. North Shore and Waitakere Hospitals were not affected.
The fire service and lift companies released some people trapped in elevators.
Traffic lights
More than 300 sets of traffic lights were out in central Auckland and a Vector spokeswoman said Manukau was also affected, while police said the power cut stretched to Hamilton. Thousands of homes, businesses and shops were without power.
The blackout stopped trains on the Auckland network. Back-up systems came into operation and allowed limited services to operate, but one passenger, Jon Reeves, told nzherald.co.nz it took him 2 hours to get to work on a journey which usually takes 20 minutes.
A spokesman for Ontrack in Auckland said this morning: "We haven't been able to bring trains into Britomart station. Passengers have been discharged at Newmarket and the Strand and subsequent services have been scheduled to operate to and from there.
"An earlier ... failure on the Western Line, that disrupted services from 6am, was unrelated to the power failure. It has now been repaired."
Strong winds and a high tide were causing the sea to break over the causeway on Tamaki Drive. Some motorists were driving on the wrong side of the road to avoid the waves and traffic was backed up in the morning rush hour.
MetService issued a weather warning this morning saying high winds would affect the whole of the North Island while snow would continue but then ease in Canterbury.
A Vector spokeswoman said the cause of the Auckland blackout was a fault on the Transpower network. She said: "An earth wire has snapped and fallen across the 110 kv feeder from the Otahuhu substation.
"All efforts are focused on restoring power as soon as possible."
Transpower's Chris Roberts said 1000 megawatts of supply had been lost at a time on a winter's morning when close to 2000 megawatts would normally be used.
Transpower presumed the power failure was weather related but could not rule out a maintenance-related problem, he said.
Cellphone coverage was also affected in Auckland.
Police asked people in Auckland to only contact them in emergencies as they were aware of the weather and power situation. They said some drivers were guilty of "lunacy" in the bad conditions, doing U-turns and driving the wrong way.
The fire service said it had received around 50 calls by mid-morning, including some from people trapped in lifts in the Auckland CBD. Fallen trees and powerlines were also causing problems on the roads.
Auckland council said a number of its wastewater pumps were without power and asked people not to wash clothes or dishes and only flush toilets when absolutely necessary.
Mobile telephones should only be used for essential calls, the council said.
High winds caused the closure of Tauranga Airport this morning and a fallen tree closed the northbound lane on SH22 at Pukekohe Golf course.
Severe gales battered the lower North Island overnight bringing down tree braches and power lines on SH5 on the Napier to Taupo road.
Heavy rain is forecast for later today bringing flooding.
An oil spill, heavy rains and gale force winds have also combined to close State Highway 1 between Pukerua Bay and Paraparaumu, 50km north of Wellington.
Central police communications spokesman Chris Turner said roading contractors were attempting to clean the oil spill and debris from the road.
Despite the severe conditions Cook Strait ferry sailings had not been affected and flights in and out of Wellington Airport were still on schedule.
MetService forecaster Cameron Coutts said galeforce winds were expected to batter the country for the most of the morning.
The front would clear the North Island early afternoon and by tonight just showers and winds would be sweeping most of the country, he said.
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Hi JP. I'd like to know that too. The sky has cleared completely down here in Omarama and we're about to enjoy a magnificent sunset over the snow-covered high country. No sign of any further action weather, but maybe it's on the way.JP wrote:What are the chances that the next front moving over invercargill now will bring colder southerlies and more cold rain \ snow?? The weather image I saw seems to show the isobars coming directly and deeply from the south..
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More snow for Chch tonight? I get back to the city and today's stuff has moved on. There's a layer of high cloud, but doesn't look like it'll deliver much now.What are the chances that the next front moving over invercargill now will bring colder southerlies and more cold rain \ snow?? The weather image I saw seems to show the isobars coming directly and deeply from the south..
A rule of thumb - if there's snow in Chch, there won't be anything to low levels on the outer peninsula.
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