The North Island drought is unlikely to be broken this month,
with nothing but scattered showers on the horizon over the
next 10 days.
WeatherWatch analyst Richard Green said showers overnight and
this morning were easing, and the remainder of March was
forecast to be mostly dry.
There could be a few scattered showers, with Northland and
northern Auckland likely to get some late next week, but not
enough to saturate parched areas.
"The drought conditions will ease more gradually than just
one rainy event," Mr Green said.
"Drought areas across the North Island; I can't see anything
over the next 10 days that would give any more than 10
millimetres of rain."
Mr Green said more anticyclones were expected to keep the
rain at bay over the next two to three weeks, but a couple of
fronts might deliver showers in the south and west of the
South Island towards the end of the weekend.
"A few could drift north, but nothing to the degree or the
saturation of what you've seen this week."
The Easter break would be largely dry, with parts of the West
Coast of the South Island getting some rain or bursts of
showers.
April had more potential for rainy spells, but a prolonged
wet spell was not anticipated at this point.
Mr Green said there would be further changes to the weather
patterns next month, but the drought conditions would
gradually ease, rather than be broken by a widespread heavy
rain event.
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