It's a question I've been asked plenty of times lately - has a main centre in New Zealand ever recorded winds equal to a category 5 cyclone?
The answer... is yes - although it wasn't because of a tropical cyclone. But it did have connections with the tropics.
In 1968 a former tropical cyclone called Giselle was tracking across the North Island. At the same time a polar storm was racing out of the Southern Ocean. The two collided over Wellington creating what is known as the "perfect storm".
It was this storm that sunk the Wahine ferry in Wellington harbour as it blasted the capital with hurricane force winds. NIWA records show winds gusted to 275km/h - which is equal to a category 5 cyclone. Around 100 homes lost their roofs.
But the winds were very different to a cat 5 cyclone. With a cyclone, the strong winds are generated around the eye of the storm over open water. In this case it was the merger of the two systems and Wellington's localised topography that created the incredible winds - and they only existed as this strength in one part of Wellington.
It was the first and only time winds of that speed were recorded in New Zealand.
Another question I've been asked lately - Could New Zealand ever receive a Category 5 tropical cyclone?
The answer... is no.
The simple answer lies in New Zealand's location - we're just too far south. Tropical Cyclones need warm water to fuel them. In northern New Zealand, where our sea waters are the warmest, the average temperature at this time of year is roughly around 22 degrees. Compare this with the tropics where it's up to 34 degrees at the moment.
Even a drop of a few degrees can dramatically decrease the strength of a tropical storm as we saw with Zelia which was a category 3 cyclone just a few hundred kilometres north of New Zealand was barely even a low by the time it reached our shores several hours later.
<i>Weather Watch</i>: Has NZ ever experienced Cat 5 winds?
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