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Alf Rendell starts new scholarship
Alf Rendell, 98, published a book of his aerial photographs of Tauranga from the 1940s and 1950s. The proceeds from the book have been used to start an endowment fund, which will fund a $2000 scholarship awarded annually to a Bachelor of Creative Industries student at Bay of Plenty Polytechnic.

Gate Pa battle recreated
Amateur historian Rob Hicks has spent many hours in his Bay of Plenty garage creating a dramatic diorama of the Battle of Gate Pa which was fought in Tauranga in April 1864. This year will mark the 150th anniversary of the historic battle fought between local Maori and the Crown.

BOPT: Labour's promise to remove Rena
Labour party leader David Cunliffe promises to remove Rena from Astrolabe Reef.

Harrison Mundy balloon release
Hundreds of people gathered at Omanu Beach today to farewell Harrison Mundy, who died last week after a public fight against cancer.

Two lows moving in
Two low pressure systems are moving in towards New Zealand, one coming out of the sub-tropics from the north east and the other coming in from the south west. The two will weaken as they move across the country this week, but it means some who need rain will get it – but the rain predictions for the upper North Island remain patchy and hit and miss. By the end of the week we have another sou’west flow across the country which means the weekend ahead may be a little cooler along our western coastlines, but sunnier and hotter in the east or north east. Don’t forget to also check out our great new animated wind maps in our weather videos.

What needs to be done to stop people using phones while driving?
Greg Murphy argues that 'draconian' laws need to be put in place to curb cellphone use while driving.

Dry week ahead
The rain makers are mostly giving New Zealand a miss this week and the cloudy, gloomy, weather for some western areas should also clear up as winds shift from the west to the east over much of the North Island. Last weeks rain was hugely welcomed by gardeners and farmers who tell WeatherWatch.co.nz that conditions 10 days ago were drier than they were 12 months ago (ahead of the big drought) – now farmers are smiling as we head towards summer with good grass growth and potentially another rain maker on the horizon before the month is done.

High flyers in their element
Bay of Plenty Times photographers took in the high-flying antics of the region's finest young volleyballers at both ASB Arena and the Mount Main Beach on Friday and Saturday.

Dry weather is returning
This week has seen a number of torrential downpours and thunderstorms around the North Island – reversing a big and early dry pattern that had started to form. But don’t have false hope – the next couple of weeks look very dry for some regions as high pressure systems sweep in over New Zealand and for the first time in a while we have a large high moving in south of the country.

Weather: Dry weekend ahead
Head weather analyst Philip Duncan talks about the upcoming forecast around the country.

Mostly dry for Guy Fawkes
The forecast this week and weekend looks mostly dry for those celebrating Guy Fawkes. For farmers and gardeners wanting rain in the north, there is a low coming in from the Tasman Sea but it is a bit hit and miss. It will deliver isolated heavy showers perhaps on Wednesday and Thursday for some parts of the North Island and potentially the upper South Island. Temperatures this week look warm… in fact hot for some with highs pushing into the mid 20s.

Calmer weekend on the cards
This weekend is looking sunnier, calmer and drier for the most part as air pressure evens out around the nation. Sunny, warm, weather is expected to kick off the weekend in eastern parts of the South Island where light frosts are even possible. On Sunday temps drop a little across parts of the South Island and showers or rain returns to the lower West Coast. For those desperately wanting rain in the north, there isn’t much in the forecast but a low in the Tasman Sea next week may bring a little wet weather to the north and west of New Zealand.

WeatherWatch: (OCT 30) More wind and rain
Another burst of wind and rain is coming to New Zealand this week but unlike last week it wont be as stormy with winds mostly below damaging and rain events fairly short lived. The bulk of the rain will be again falling on the western coastline and again mostly the West Coast. Sunniest will be eastern parts of the North Island while windiest weather will again be central and eastern areas – and possibly Auckland for a time as the sou’west flow returns for the end of the working week.

Labour Weekend forecast
A lot to cover in this weather video – gales for Wellington, Central NZ and eastern areas. Heavy rain for the West Coast. Hot winds in the north and cool winds in the south. The next few days are dominated by a large low pressure system in the Southern Ocean and will push up a strong west to south west wind flow across New Zealand – which eases late Sunday bringing, hopefully, a fairly settled Labour Day Monday. There may be some cloud in the west and even the odd isolated shower – but for the most part Monday looks to be much calmer for most places.

Big high for the weekend
The first large high in several weeks will cross New Zealand this weekend bringing mostly dry and mostly calm conditions. While a front and strong winds move up the South Island on Friday the high will basically ‘kill off’ the wind and rain – leaving cloudy areas and a few isolated showers on Saturday but certainly a huge improvement from recent weather. Most places have a calm, dry and warm weekend on the way.

Waste to Gold: Sea lettuce plague
The annual plague of sea lettuce that blankets the beaches and harbours of the Bay of Plenty is now being gathered and made into compost instead of being dumped. The lettuce often gets washed onto the beaches in huge quantities during spring and summer just as holidaymakers descend on the Bay of Plenty.

WeatherWatch: (OCT 14) Stormy weather set to ease
Severe gales are again blasting parts of New Zealand but there is some positive news if you’re tired of the wind – a large high looks set to calm things down later this week in the north, then into many other areas this weekend. While gales are likely to return to Wellington later this week they should be well down on the hurricane force winds recorded on Monday in the capital. The South Island will be more exposed to windy weather this week – but mostly sunny and warm if you live in the east.

Stormy weather hits NZ
Gales, possibly damaging, will surge across the nation this weekend and again on Monday. On Saturday it will be the North Island most exposed to gales, some gusts over 110km/h. On Sunday the North Island sees winds easing for the most part but then a ferocious band of wind is likely to move into inland parts of the South Island before blasting central New Zealand - including the capital Wellington - on Monday PM. One to watch.

Rihanna gets NZ tattoo
Rihanna has taken home a permanent reminder of her visit to New Zealand - a traditional tattoo on her right hand by Inia Taylor and Tiki Taane. Courtesy YouTube / Tiki Taane

Windier weather kicking off
Head weather analyst Philip Duncan talks about the damaging squall that hit an Auckland suburb on Tuesday. We look at the upcoming weekend weather which promises more wind, rain, sun and calm - plus we also look at the new windier weather pattern that is moving in until the end of next week and could bring a spell of severe weather to parts of New Zealand.

Cool change ahead
A cool change is moving up the country over the next couple of days bringing some snow above 500m in the south but certainly nothing significant. The change isn’t looking quite as cold as it did a few days ago but the latest models show temperatures will tumble nationwide, especially in the South Island, until Thursday. Across Friday winds build over the South Island then into the North Island on Saturday – this will mark what we predicted last month, two weeks of windy weather for the second and third weeks of October.

A mostly dry weekend
Quite a bit of cloud will affect various regions across the country this weekend – but the general trend is for dry, calm weather for most regions. Brisk winds will continue though some central areas but the windier weather arrives later next week. In fact kicking off around next Thursday is a windy spell which could last until Labour Weekend. Finally, if you’ve been enjoying the warm weather in the east of both islands later, be prepared for a brief cold snap early next week – Mon and Tues sees a southerly blowing up the southern and eastern coastlines of New Zealand from Antarctica – it’s short lived though, warmer weather returns by Wednesday.

Weekend weather report
Gusty to gale force winds will again push through central parts of NZ on Saturday, mostly Wellington and Wairarapa. It means it will be warm in the east of both islands but Sunday sees a cooler change move in to much of the South Island. Generally speaking the weekend isn’t looking too rough this weekend, it’s a typical spring-like weekend!

WeatherWatch: (SEP 25) Storm now weakening
Philip Duncan covers the track of last night’s storm, where it’s placed now and what New Zealand can expect over today, the coming weekend and for the start of October next week. For today the low has stalled just west of Auckland and tonight will drift back across the North Island bringing strong westerlies to Northland and Auckland. Most other places should see winds easing as the centre of the low starts to weaken significantly across Thursday. A west to south west flow will stay with the country until Monday.

Subtropical low coming
A storm is approaching the North Island and upper South island. Winds will pick up during Tuesday with rain developing too. Overnight Tuesday and into Wednesday this storm peaks – gales and heavy rain are possible. By Thursday it’s easing but a strong south west change behind it could make for a windy end to the week for Auckland.