MetService also flagged the potential for surface flooding and slips which, after several days of rainfall, could occur regardless of whether warnable amounts of rainfall eventuated.
An orange heavy rainfall warning was already in place for Gisborne/Tairawhiti, along with the Wairoa District northeast of Nuhaka, over most of today – while a heavy rain watch has been issued for Hawke’s Bay about and south of Te Pohue up to 8pm tonight.
Parts of Tairāwhiti/Gisborne recorded over 60mm of rain in the 24 hours from 10am on Sunday, and Gisborne itself saw about 30mm in that period. Further south, a few locations in Hawke’s Bay and the Wairarapa also saw about 30mm.
Tomorrow was expected to bring a reprieve as the rain eased off, but showers would still be on the cards for most regions of the country.
“Southland’s really the place to be on Tuesday, and aside from Taranaki, the western regions of the North Island will also be mainly dry,” MetService meteorologist Alwyn Bakker said.
“Elsewhere, there will be some showers hanging about.”
Looking to the next bout later in the week, MetService meteorologist Andrew James said there were still some differences between different weather models, and the first watches were likely to be issued tomorrow morning.
“The message I’d like Kiwis in that part of the country to hear is that, first of all, it’s been a hard run for you guys and we’re thinking of you,” he said.
“The second thing would be to stay up to date with the forecast because anywhere in those areas are in line for some heavier rain, from later in this week to the early part of the weekend.”
James said a “stubborn” high pressure system remained to the east of New Zealand and was keeping rain-making systems from moving over us quickly.
The high was also helping to drag down warm, moist air from the north – where this year’s relentless run of subtropical “atmospheric rivers” have been sourced from.
Niwa Weather forecaster Ben Noll said that high was “probably the most important player” influencing New Zealand’s current weather.
“It’s like an atmospheric stop-sign that’s blocking the incoming sequence of lows this week from moving away with any real pace,” he said.
“So, you’re locking in this unsettled weather over these regions for extended periods of time, and if you have slow-moving, heavy, convective showers or thunderstorms, then this is just where we’ve run into problems over the last six to 12 months.”
Noll said these La Niña-like patterns also owed to the fact the tropical West Pacific was still running warm – even as meteorological agencies have just declared the start of El Niño.
“So, we’re still seeing the connection to that with plumes of moisture extending down here from the subtropics, and, in some cases, even the tropics.”
Fortunately, Niwa was predicting the pattern would change over July and August – and its seasonal outlook indicated equal odds for normal to below normal rainfall for the northern North Island over the season as a whole.
Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined the Herald reporting team in 2011 and has spent the last decade writing about everything from conservation and cosmology to climate change and Covid-19.