One of the boys who escaped a swollen stream in the Waitakere Ranges in the weekend storm arrived at the Waitakere Golf Club "shaking and shivering" as he raised the alarm.
"It was obvious he had been in the water," club manager Josh Ritchie told the Herald today. "He was pretty shaken-up and worried."
West Auckland teenagers Sosi Turagaiviu and Mitch Woolley, both 17, died after being swept away in a flash flood in the Cascade Falls area on Saturday.
Mitch, his twin brother Denver and Sosi were swept away but Denver managed to grab hold of a tree until he was winched to safety by the Westpac rescue helicopter.
The tourists left the boy in the car with the "heater blasting" while they came inside to tell Ritchie what had occurred.
"I called 111 as soon as they told me about him. I grabbed some spare clothes and went out to talk to him, that is when I heard there were three other boys who had not got out of the stream.
"I went straight back inside and called 111 to say there were still three of them in the stream. Fire and emergency and the ambulance arrived pretty soon after that."
The youth was taken to Waitakere Hospital with mild hypothermia.
In southwest Auckland yesterday afternoon, off a small island at Awhitu peninsula, a man died as he and his family were caught by a rising tide as they tried to wade back to shore.
Campers managed to rescue a boy and a girl aged 12 and 7.
The man's name is yet to be released.
Water Safety New Zealand chief executive Jonty Mills said the weekend's incidents highlighted the changeable and unpredictable nature of New Zealand's waterways, particularly after heavy rainfall and storms.
"First and foremost there are families grieving from the tragic incidents over the weekend.
"Every preventable fatal drowning leaves a family and a community devastated."
"To check the weather forecast and remember the water safety code: be prepared, watch out for yourself and others, be aware of the dangers and know your limits."