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Around 11,000 people were still without power in the North Island this morning after a stormy night which battered much of the country lifting roofs, bringing down trees, and disrupting power supply.
In Auckland, around 2000 people remained without power this morning.
Wind gusts which peaked at 150km/h at the Manukau Heads felled power lines, cutting electricity in Warkworth, Remuera, Mangere and large parts of West Auckland.
Thousands of households as far north as Dome Valley near Warkworth and as far south as Huntly were without power.
Large trees crashed on to the Waikato Expressway 50km south of Auckland, striking one vehicle and creating traffic chaos.
Diversions were set up for at least half an hour as police used chainsaws to remove the toppled trees.
An overhead sign fell on to the Northwestern Motorway between Newton Rd and St Lukes, closing the west-bound lanes.
Grey Lynn resident Debbie Pope had her car partly crushed by a huge pine tree which fell in Shirley Ave.
"I thought it was thunder at first, but when I looked out the window there was a tree, larger than my house, covering my car," she said.
The tree crashed between two houses, missing by 3m the bedroom where she had been. "So I was pretty lucky in the end; it probably would have crushed me."
The MetService issued 30 severe-weather warnings covering every main centre in New Zealand.
In Auckland, wind gusts frequently topped 100km/h.
Electricity lines company Vector believes about 30,000 people around Auckland lost power at some stage during the storm.
Around 2000 people were still without power this morning, of which about half were in Piha, west of the city.
Police were called out to at least 18 incidents of fallen trees blocking roads in the region. An ambulance spokeswoman said a car had hit a tree in Tuakau, resulting in one person being taken to Middlemore Hospital with moderate injuries.
Thames and parts of the Coromandel were also affected by the storm, which had battered the lower North Island on Friday morning.
Weatherwatch analyst Phillip Duncan said the storm, from the Southern Ocean, was one of the largest in the world yesterday afternoon in terms of size and air pressure.
"We were only touched by the top of the storm," he said.
"The centre of it was 2500km below Auckland, yet we were getting battered, with huge downpours. That gives you an idea of the strength of it," Mr Duncan said.
Gale-force winds were expected to continue during the weekend in Auckland. After the thunderstorms eased, showers would remain.
The Auckland Regional Council warned that large swells caused by the storms could create unpredictable wave surges on west coast beaches today, especially at Muriwai.
Regional parks manager Scott De Silva recommended staying away from the beach at high tide - at 5.53am and 6.25pm today - and for rock fishers to wear lifejackets and take extreme care at all times.
He said access to Flat Rock and Muriwai Beach could be closed.
The MetService forecast a 6m swell off the North Island's west coast.
Earlier on, lightning caused fires and cut power to thousands of residents in the lower North Island.
The MetService said there were 2000 lightning strikes in 24 hours, some of which set fire to a shed and trees in the Hutt Valley and Wairarapa regions. About 3600 Hutt Valley residents lost power after two strikes hit substations in both areas, Wellington Electricity Lines spokesman Ryan Auger said.
Power had been restored to the last houses about 5.20pm, but the severe storm warning meant more downed power lines were possible.
He advised people to "always assume that lines are live" and call the lines company.
Severe-weather forecaster Paul Mallinson said tornadoes were most likely to occur in coastal areas, but inland areas were not immune.
Snow was expected in the North Island's central high country overnight.
Thunderstorms and snow were also expected to continue in the South Island, with particularly heavy snowfalls south of Mt Cook.
A heavy-rain warning remained in effect for Fiordland, the Westland ranges south of Otira, and the headwaters of Canterbury and Otago rivers.
Teen puts wind up folks
An Olympic windsurfing coach's son was lucky to make it back to shore after he was caught in gale-force winds yesterday afternoon.
Grant Beck, who coached gold-medal winners Barbara and Bruce Kendall, said his 17 year-old son Logan went windsurfing after school, without telling his parents.
"No amount of confidence makes up for the sort of wind we had," Beck said. "I wouldn't have been capable to cope out there."
Logan set out from Narrow Neck Beach near Devonport and tried to sail north to Takapuna Beach.
When he did not come home, his parents called the police. Emergency services scoured the harbour for the windsurfer.
Logan paddled ashore and walked home, arriving at 8pm.
- ADDITIONAL REPORTING: NZPA
Today's outlook
* Fairly windy, with more showers, some heavy.
* Lower half of the North Island can expect gales.
Yesterday
* Lightning strikes
* More than 2000 over 24 hours.Wind
* Manukau Heads - 155km/h.
* Auckland Airport - 100km/h.Rain
* Matamata - 16mm of rain in one hour.
* Hail - 1cm in Upper North Island.
* Snow in South Island.
(Source: Andy Downs, MetService forecaster)