Tauranga deluged with 144mm of rain

Tauranga received the most rain, with 144mm falling in the region in the last three days. Image: MetService.

Receiving 144mm of rain in three days has put Tauranga at the top of the table for places that were drenched in the weekend.

'For the past couple of days, the country has been stuck in a moist northeast flow caused by a high east of the Chatham Islands that refused to budged,” says MetService forecaster Tuporo Marsters.

A trough became slow moving over the North Island in this setup and caused heavy downpours from the Bay of Plenty to the Hawke's Bay region with 3 day totals being over 100mm.

'Tauranga had the most with 144mm followed by Hamilton, Taupo and Napier reaching 105 mm.

'Places up in Northland got another top up of 50 to 60mm while 8mm fell over Christchurch to help dampen the fires on the Port Hills.”

Kawerau also received a dumping of rain, flooding most of the town's streets,

During the afternoons over the central North Island, moist air, daytime heating and converging winds caused thunderstorms to bubble up adding to the rain that had already fallen.

There had also been some build-ups over the Nelson and Marlborough ranges with Blenheim catching 28mm.

Conditions will improve somewhat over the next couple of days as the high near the Chatham Islands nudges closer and sinks slightly south directing an east to southeast flow over the North Island and northerlies around to the South Island.

What this means is that sheltered places like Tauranga, Hamilton and Palmerston North and even Christchurch will see fine weather, while Hastings and Gisborne may see the odd shower.

Greymouth sees rain on Tuesday as the northerlies become established.

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3 comments

Needed

Posted on 20-02-2017 09:58 | By overit

Loved all the rain-it was so needed.


Or...

Posted on 20-02-2017 11:11 | By penguin

...How about the 220 mm recorded in a standard rain gauge at Poike for the same period? A characteristic of this weather pattern can often be very heavy localised rain or "downpours.'' Geographical features e.g. proximity to hills also influence intensity and type of rainfall. Therefore there can be wide variations in recordings over an area. But the lawns love it so do the weeds...


@penguin

Posted on 20-02-2017 14:57 | By Bay Citizen

Whatever rain the greater Tauranga area or the Western Bay gets, you can guarantee that the official weather station in Tauranga will miss most of it. They seem to have picked the driest possible spot in which to locate their rain gauge.


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