17 September 2010
A storm the size of Australia is hitting New Zealand with winds of 130km/h around Wellington and heavy snow falling in parts of Westland.
MetService has issued severe weather warnings for the whole country as the storm passes over.
It warned snow could fall to 100-200 metres in south Westland and Fiordland, potentially affecting Te Anau, Manapouri and Monowai as well as higher roads and passes.
Heavy rain is expected about the ranges of Buller and northwest Nelson as well as the central North Island high country, where it could turn to snow above 800 metres.
MetService warned that rivers and streams in these areas as well as Canterbury and Otago could rise rapidly.
Strong or gale-force winds are expected throughout the North Island with severe northwesterly gales predicted about northern and eastern areas, as well as Wellington and the Marlborough Sounds.
Winds of 120km/h are likely in the northern half of the North Island, accompanied by heavy squally showers and thunderstorms in western areas.
Australia's biggest wave heralds huge surf for Sydney
Paul Tatnell
September 17, 2010 - 10:19AM
The surf at Manly this morning. Photo: Manly Surf Report
Sydney's beaches can expect a weekend of dangerous conditions due to huge swells smashing the shores.
While Tasmania can now boast Australia's biggest recorded wave, 10 kilometres off shore yesterday at 18.4 metres high, Sydney is also experiencing big surf conditions thanks to the same low-pressure weather pattern.
Weatherzone.com.au meteorologist Martin Palmer said Sydney's south-facing beaches would cop most of the big surf today.
"We have four-metre swells down the south coast and peaking at about three metres in Sydney and, while it isn't quite the 18 metres Tassie is having, it is still big and heavy," he said.
"There is a southerly swell coming through and what we are expecting is a pulse coming through today and the surf to actually get bigger.
"Southern Sydney is expecting six to eight foot waves while Manly is currently experiencing four to six foot waves, but that has grown just in the last hour."
Mr Palmer said Tasmania is recording eight- to 10-metre waves
While he said yesterday's 18.4-metre wave in Tasmania was the highest ever recorded In Australia, he pointed out records go back only a short time.
"It is the highest recorded wave and some people are calling it the biggest wave on record, and that is technically correct, but it might be a bit misleading as records only go back 10 years and I am sure there has been a bigger wave," he said.
"All this has been caused by a big, big low which is now hitting New Zealand and is moving away from us for the weekend," he said.
Full article: Sydney Surf: Huge Swells | Tasmania: Biggest Wave Ever Recorded