A Wet And Windy Start To The Week
Covering period of Sunday 3rd - Tuesday 5th March
This weekend was hardly a calm start to meteorological autumn, with a series of fronts bringing areas of rain with heavy falls to both islands, as well as strong winds and fluctuating temperatures. But heading into a new week, MetService is forecasting widespread severe weather as an intense trough of low pressure closes in from the west.
The trough reaches the South Island tonight, moving eastwards across Aotearoa New Zealand during Monday. Heavy rain is expected for the western South Island as the trough passes, as well as the already sodden central North Island. Orange Heavy Rain Warnings are in place for parts of Fiordland, the Otago headwaters, the Tararua Range and Mount Taranaki. Heavy Rain Watches are in place for the Westland ranges, the Headwaters of Canterbury lakes and rivers from Arthurs Pass southwards, central and western areas of the North Island and the ranges of easter Bay of Plenty and Tairawhiti.
Widespread strong or gale northwesterly
winds also accompany the trough, easing in the south on
Monday morning as the trough moves away, but affecting
central areas until Tuesday afternoon. A Strong Wind Warning
is in effect for the Canterbury High Country with gusts
expected to reach 120km/h in exposed places. Strong Wind
Watches are in force for Fiordland, inland Southland and
Otago, and central and southern parts of the North Island,
gusting 100 km/h in exposed places.
MetService
meteorologist Ngaire Wotherspoon advises, “Stay up to date
with the latest forecasts on metservice.com as the
situation develops. More Warning areas could be added
further north, and existing Watches could be upgraded as we
gather more information.”
Strong, cold southwesterly
winds follow the trough, spreading heavy showers with
embedded thunderstorms over southern and central Aotearoa.
This unseasonable cold change will be felt across the
country at the beginning of the week, and snow could settle
above 1000 metres in Fiordland and the ranges of Otago on
Monday.
Wotherspoon notes, “Hot temperatures occurred
in eastern South Island areas over the weekend, so this cold
southerly change will be felt keenly over the next couple of
days. Alexandra had a high of 29°C on Saturday, and by
Tuesday they have a forecast high of 14°C, and 4°C
overnight.”
The strong southwesterlies are likely to generate large swell along the south and west coasts later in the day on Monday, before easing on afternoon Tuesday as the trough moves away. A Heavy Swell Warning has been issued for Otaki to Cape Terawhiti with northwest combined waves rising to 3.5 – 4 meters from Tuesday 1am until 1pm. “An end to the wild weather is on the horizon; a ridge of high pressure settles over most of the country on Wednesday, bringing calmer, clearer conditions,” says Wotherspoon.
Please keep up to date with the most
current information from MetService at MetService
- Te Ratonga
Tirorangi