The New Zealand Herald

The heat is on — again

Hot week forecast for many Kiwis, little or no rain to help firefighte­rs and farmers

- Martin Johnston The MetService said the highest temperatur­es at the airport this year, 28C, were recorded on January 30 and 31 and on February 4. But Ardmore Aerodrome and Whenuapai sweltered in 30C heat on January 29. The weather week is shaping up sim

Aucklander­s crank up your fans — it’s going to be a hotty this week. That’s once a dribble of forecast midday showers today is out of the way.

The sun is expected to bake the region to 26C today and tomorrow, with 28C on Thursday at Auckland Airport and 30C in Hunua. areas facing to the east or northeast, are experienci­ng what the MetService rates as high-quality surf conditions, with waves over a metre in height. Hot Water Beach on the eastern side of the Coromandel Peninsula is expected to have 1.9m waves and offshore winds today.

A ridge of high pressure was in control over the North Island yesterday while a front edged slowly onto the South Island, said forecaster Sarah Haddon. The front would move onto the North Island today.

“It’s weakening as it goes so there’s not a lot of precipitat­ion with that, just a few showers over the North Island with that front. Everything should be becoming fine [today] over the South Island as well.”

In Christchur­ch the temperatur­e is set to soar to 31C on Thursday. Dunedin can expect a week in the mid20s, with some rain setting in on Thursday. Only on the West Coast is heavy rain forecast.

In fire-plagued Nelson/Tasman the forecast holds out the prospect of some moisture today, but Haddon said not to expect much from the front that would pass eastwards over the region early this morning.

“We are expecting there to be not a lot of precipitat­ion with that,” he said.

WeatherWat­ch NZ analyst Philip Duncan said that towards the end of the week, several low-pressure systems well to the north of New Zealand could merge together, covering an area the size of Australia.

By Friday this tropical low could bring rain to very dry parts in northern New Zealand.

Over the weekend it could drop south to cover the upper North Island.

“There is a very fine line between tropical rain to the north, and completely bone dry over New Zealand. For those trying to lock in weekend plans in northern New Zealand it will be a matter of ‘watch this space’ as we fine tune that boundary for heavy rain and completely/mostly dry.”

 ?? Photo / Alan Gibson ?? A couple of early morning swimmers look to beat the heat with a dip at sunrise in Shark Alley, Mt Maunganui.
Photo / Alan Gibson A couple of early morning swimmers look to beat the heat with a dip at sunrise in Shark Alley, Mt Maunganui.

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