Mother and son shelter in a cupboard as ferocious winds send a tree branch smashing into their living room.
Michelle McKenzie held her terrified little boy in her arms and told him to pray.
The 26-year-old and her 3-year-old son Christopher hid inside a cupboard in their Avondale home as a ferocious storm pummelled Auckland and the Bay of Plenty yesterday. It was a decision that may have saved their lives.
When it was quiet again, the pair emerged to discover a branch "speared from the roof right through the ceiling". It came to rest outside the cupboard where they were sheltering.
The pair sheltered together as the house shook above them and they heard two loud bangs.
"That was the most scary bit, the shaking."
McKenzie wanted to cry, but held it in so Christopher wouldn't be frightened.
It didn't work.
"He said 'I'm scared, I'm scared' and I told him to pray.
"He closed his eyes and said 'Jesus, please just stop it' over and over."
The family was staying with friends last night while they figured out what to do, McKenzie said.
A multimillion-dollar clean-up continues after the storm that hit Auckland yesterday.
Heavy gusts of wind described as "mini tornadoes" wreaked havoc, ripping trees from their roots, lifting roofs from houses and tipping over light aircraft in Auckland. The gusts were so strong they blew over shipping containers at Ports of Auckland and several cars were crushed by falling trees.
Northern fire communications shift manager Scott Osmond said fire services were called to more than 100 weather-related incidents in Auckland in the space of two hours.