'Twisters Cut a Swathe' - SE Hamilton Tornadoes 12th
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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These topics are a read-only archive and may be subject to out-of-date information.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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Manukau heads observer wrote:Seems to be!Waikato is now the new 'Tornado Alley'
(must be aucklands turn next!)
Yes, Ok, F0, thats only 65 knots...the picture on the start of the thread shows damage more than 65 knots I would have to agree
Only 65 knots??

Yep. The great Waikato Basin is the southern hemisphere's tornado alley.

Then probably followed by that Hokitika -> Greymouth channel.
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I think it's the other way around (for New Zealand at least; not sure about the southern hemisphere bit!).Foggy Hamilton wrote:The great Waikato Basin is the southern hemisphere's tornado alley. Then probably followed by that Hokitika -> Greymouth channel.
I'm guessing there are a lot of tornados or small 'twisters' on the South Island West coast that go unreported because of the sparser population. The West Coast easily gets more thunderstorms than any other part of NZ, and I would say the same applies to any thunderstorm related phenomena like tornados. Also the proximity of the Southern Alps and the local wind regime along the West Coast favours the formation of tornados more than any other area in NZ.
(BTW, I grew up in the Waikato, and I never saw a tornado there....

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its the alps directing the NW flow as a NE along the coast that gives the windsheer that tornadoes like as an ingredient...yes?
same sort of thing happens on a smaller scale with the waitakere ranges, spawning tornadoes down wind of them...during a severe thunderstorm...
Mt Taranaki probably does the same thing?
same sort of thing happens on a smaller scale with the waitakere ranges, spawning tornadoes down wind of them...during a severe thunderstorm...
Mt Taranaki probably does the same thing?
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Yes, I believe so. The other place this probably happens (on a smaller scale) is the Kapiti Coast and Horewhenua due to the Tararua ranges. Paraparaumu seems to be a place that gets a fair few twisters in unstable northwesterly flows.Manukau heads observer wrote:its the alps directing the NW flow as a NE along the coast that gives the windsheer that tornadoes like as an ingredient...yes?