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Batten Down the Hatches People

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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« Reply #25 on: September 20, 2010, 09:06:33 pm »


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« Reply #26 on: September 20, 2010, 09:06:55 pm »


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« Reply #27 on: September 22, 2010, 12:39:14 pm »


Location: Rimutuka Hill and SH1 around Desert Road
District: Wellington
9:54AM - 22 September 2010

UPDATE ON ROAD CONDITIONS


The Rimutuka Hill

Now open however cars are only being allowed across in escorted conveys one direction at a time. Traffic is being taken across from one side in convoy and then a return convoy will depart. Motorists should therefore continue to defer unecessary travel across the hill or expect large delays.


SH1/SH40 - Taihape/Desert Road/Ohakune

Snow is falling in these areas. The roads are still open however are marginal and may be closed in the near future. This is currently being assessed


Please view the full details of the alert online at:

http://www.police.govt.nz/news/updates/25527.html
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« Reply #28 on: September 23, 2010, 09:04:37 am »

Lost another branch off a plum tree yesterday. The hail and rain was like horizontal bullets. We are lucky the Pohutukawa didn't take out our power and phone.

My makeshift bean frame which surprisingly has stood up to a number of strong winds due to the depth it is buried into the ground is now at a 30 degree angle.
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« Reply #29 on: September 23, 2010, 10:07:25 am »


Ssweetp,
When all this is over, and if your plum is a treasured tree, it may be a to ask at a garden center for a sealant for it's scars.  When the weather warms up it is likely to bleed and/or become infected with fungus disease.


I had planted out a few tomatoes, their stems are purpled, but no frost damage yet because they do not receive first sun (HA!)

As far as I know we have had no damage here, dunno about the rest of the village, or the camp - I can still see the big bluegums but ain't planning on going out to look at anything else.


                   
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« Reply #30 on: September 23, 2010, 10:22:44 am »


This weather is really weird.

It has been rather mild in Wairarapa, yet the hills around here are covered in snow down to really low levels.

It's almost as though the cold temperatures (it must be bloody cold for it to snow like that) haven't reached down as low as the Wairarapa valley floor.

Early yesterday morning, the Rimutaka Hill Road (SH.2) was closed due to heavy snowfall (it had been closed since Tuesday evening), then it was opened to escorted convoys only late morning. Yet down in the Wairarapa valley, we have had clear blue skies and sunshine.
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« Reply #31 on: September 23, 2010, 02:14:54 pm »


Weather damage piles up

By TANYA KATTERNS - The Dominion Post | 8:08AM - Thursday, 23 September 2010

BAD BREW: Gusts peeled back the roof of the old Lion Nathan brewery building beside Auckland's Newmarket railway. — Photo: Sunday News.
BAD BREW: Gusts peeled back the roof of the old Lion Nathan brewery building beside Auckland's Newmarket railway.
 — Photo: Sunday News.


WILD WEATHER is continuing to cause havoc in the central North Island, with more powerlines brought down overnight.

Powerco said about 3500 customers across Manawatu, Taranaki, Rangitikei and western Bay of Plenty were without power this morning.

"The severe winds have come through as forecast and caused trees and branches to tear down overhead lines across the country from around 3am this morning," network operations manager Phil Marsh said this morning.

"The weather conditions are forecast to ease today and we expect to restore power to the majority of affected customers by the end of the day barring further damage to the network."

Nearly 80,000 households across the area have been affected by weather-related power cuts since last Friday.


Was it something we said?

Further south, predicted snowfall for Southland did not come overnight giving the hard-hit region another day of recovery.

A heavy snow warning remained in place for Southland, with the MetService saying that 10 to 15cm of snow could accumulate above 200m tonight.

Dunedin, which also suffered power cuts overnight as 130kmh winds swept the city, was warned that more extreme winds were likely to hit the city today.

The high winds were also expected to hit Coromandel, western Bay of Plenty, Hawke's Bay, Wairarapa, Wellington, Marlborough Sounds.

"The strongest winds are expected on Wednesday night and/or Thursday morning. About Wairarapa and Hawkes Bay south of Napier gusts of 140 km/h are likely," MetService said.


SNOW BUSINESS: Thida McPhail, 3, from Stokes Valley, plays in the snow on Rimutaka Hill Road. — ROSS GIBLIN/The Dominion Post.
SNOW BUSINESS: Thida McPhail, 3, from Stokes Valley, plays in the
snow on Rimutaka Hill Road. — ROSS GIBLIN/The Dominion Post.


Heavy snow left dozens of motorists stranded between Wellington and Wairarapa, with the Rimutaka Hill Road closed until 9.30am yesterday.

Wind ripped part of the roof from Auckland Airport's domestic terminal and a piece of roof from the old Lion Nathan brewery building in central Auckland.

The huge chunk of galvanised iron landed on rail tracks as a train approached but the driver braked before hitting it and no-one was injured.

Emergency services in Auckland had dealt with more than 100 weather-related callouts by late last night.

A tornado ripped through Oakura near New Plymouth, bringing down power lines and tearing the roof off a garage.

Since Friday, more than 80,000 households have lost power supply.

Power was still out for about 100 households, and residents in pockets throughout the country were warned to prepare for more outages.

Powerco network operations manager Phil Marsh said the storm was causing more problems just as quickly as crews were repairing damage. "The crews have done a fantastic job — however, it is not over."

MetService forecaster Andy Downs said it was still a case of "a lull" in the storm. The past week's wild weather had been caused by several fast-moving fronts.

"The damage and effects are difficult to repair before the next storm hits because that is the relentless nature of these fronts literally racing through."

Last night's new front was expected to bring blizzard conditions for Southland and winds of more than 140km/h in Hawke's Bay and Wairarapa.


http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/national/4157975/Weather-damage-piles-up
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« Reply #32 on: September 24, 2010, 01:05:50 am »


Wairarapa whiteout

By GERALD FORD - Wairarapa Times-Age | Thursday, 23 September 2010

More like an Alaskan scene than one looking to the west from the foot of Mount Bruce yesterday. — Photo: Lynda Feringa.
More like an Alaskan scene than one looking to the west from
the foot of Mount Bruce yesterday. — Photo: Lynda Feringa.


SNOW BLANKETED HILLS the length of Wairarapa yesterday, coating the Rimutaka Hill Road 10cm deep and closing it for hours, leaving traffic queuing the length of Featherston's main street.

Hills were snow covered on both sides of the Wairarapa valley.

In the west it coated the Tararua foothills and Mount Bruce.

To the east — in a much rarer event — snow coated the hilltops and low hillocks from Bull Hill, south of Martinborough, to north of Eketahuna in a continuous snowdrift.

The Rimutaka Hill Road was closed from about 4am until 9.30am, with traffic banked up right to the north end of town, Adamson's Service Station manager Des Barrow said.

"There were probably more cars parked at the railway station than there have ever been. The railways had a good day," Mr Barrow said.

Road workers had been clearing snow from the early hours of the morning but at 8am Mr Barrow said the service station received a call "that it was still snowing and they had stopped clearing it because it was a waste of time".

The road was finally cleared at 9.20am after the snow had stopped falling.

"It's a beautiful sunny day here now," Mr Barrow said.

Gladstone farmer Donald McKay, whose farm is in the Maungaraki Ranges, said the snowfall was "one of the heaviest I've seen, and I've been here for 30 years".

Further up, on Admiral Hill, Angus and Trish Thomson farm at the same height as the Rimutaka Hill Road and they also had a snowfall of 8-10cm right to their doorstep.

But it was not as bad as last June, Mrs Thomson said, when snow hit some parts of the farm as deep as 20cm and had hung around for three days.

"We continue to feed out every day, which we have been doing for much of the winter," she said.

The Thomsons are expecting some stock losses "like most farmers" and hoping the weather warms up over the weekend.

Don McCreary of Hinakura said the hills behind his property were covered and sleet was falling during the morning yesterday. MetService forecaster Andy Downs said the temperature in Masterton dropped from 8°C at 1am yesterday to 3°C at 4am.

Snow was officially recorded as low as 400m but, Mr Downs said, with 10cm of snow on the Rimutaka Hill it was possible some had settled lower.


http://www.times-age.co.nz/local/news/wairarapa-whiteout/3923775/
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« Reply #33 on: September 26, 2010, 02:32:46 pm »





Thousands hit by winds, power cuts
By Kathryn Powley
6:30 AM Sunday Sep 26, 2010

It was the biggest storm in the world, and don't we know it.

After seven days of horrendous weather up and down the country, farmers and orchardists have been left counting their losses, while many homeowners are facing a big clean-up.

Weatherwatch.co.nz head analyst Philip Duncan said even areas that hadn't received wind warnings had copped a lot of damage.

The storm was characterised by powercuts throughout the country, strong winds and even flying trampolines.

Nearly 80,000 Powerco customers were affected by weather-related power cuts from Manawatu, Taranaki, Rangitikei and the Western Bay of Plenty and last Saturday 17,000 homes lost power.

Power was lost in Wanganui when a trampoline hit power lines.

A Vector spokeswoman said about 1250 houses lost power briefly in rural north Auckland when trees hit power lines in Puhoi and Dairy Flat on Tuesday.

As the storm was approaching it was labelled "the biggest in the world" because it covered an area roughly the size of Australia.

Parts of Auckland had winds of 154km/h last Friday, the same night that the roof lifted off a house in Clarks Beach on the Manukau Harbour.

Jean and Bob Squire told the Herald on Sunday they were home watching TV about 6.30pm when the wind struck.

"It was so unexpected," said Jean Squire, 79. "All of a sudden I just heard this terrible noise. We didn't even know the roof had gone, that's how quick it was and everything was just flying around like missiles in the air."

Half of their roof landed in the backyard, half in the neighbouring golf course.

Incredibly, the houses on each side were untouched.

A tarpaulin now covers their home of 15 years. They have been told it could be three months before they can return.

Horticulture New Zealand chief executive Peter Silcock said wind had damaged Bay of Plenty's avocado and kiwifruit crops as well as knocking out rows of shelterbelts.

"Avocado growers are just starting their export season and there's been a lot of windfall damage," he said.

Vegetable crops had also been affected.

"In Pukekohe I've certainly heard that potato crops have suffered wind damage that will affect their yield."

Wet weather was also preventing growers from planting vegetables, meaning crops such as squash and onions could be in shorter supply this summer. "That will affect supply, which will affect prices," he said.

But it was Southland that bore the brunt, with its stadium left in ruins and sheep farmers struggling to come to terms with stock losses.

The storm there was "unprecedented in severity and length", Federated Farmers said.

The region's president, Rod Pemberton, said it was still too soon to put a figure on the number of lambs that died during the big snow dump.

"I know of one farmer who estimates he's lost over 50 per cent of his lambs. That would be a couple of thousand."

He said many farmers wouldn't know the true impact of the storm for some days because the weather had been so bad they couldn't get out to their animals.

Farmers were being urged to seek help but so far few had taken up the offer, he said.

MetService severe weather forecaster Erick Brenstrum said there would be some respite for Southland farmers this week when warm northwesterly winds would help dry out the region.

Brenstrum said areas that had received particularly high rainfall last week were the northern slopes of Mt Taranaki, where 257mm fell in seven days, and the Crop River in the West Coast, where 225mm fell.

By Kathryn Powley

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/natural-disasters/news/article.cfm?c_id=68&objectid=10676152


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« Reply #34 on: September 26, 2010, 02:44:19 pm »


There are trees and fences down all over the place around parts of Masterton.

And yet the damage here is mild compared with Featherston.

Heaps of trees (some of them huge buggers) have blown down over the railway lines over the past few days too.

A huge blue gum tree at Renall Street railway station crashed down across the platform and tracks early on Friday morning.

Mother Nature, eh? 
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