Storm passes but impact remains

Containers at Port Otago's Ravensbourne yard lie in a jumble. PHOTO: GERARD O'BRIEN
Containers at Port Otago's Ravensbourne yard lie in a jumble. PHOTO: GERARD O'BRIEN
A tree blocks Portsmouth Dr after being ripped out of the ground. PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON
A tree blocks Portsmouth Dr after being ripped out of the ground. PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON
A power pole leans near Bluff. PHOTO: GERRIT DOPPENBERG
A power pole leans near Bluff. PHOTO: GERRIT DOPPENBERG
A tile from Knox Church flew about 30m before embedding itself 5cm into the ground. PHOTO: CRAIG...
A tile from Knox Church flew about 30m before embedding itself 5cm into the ground. PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER
The wind ripped the Tūhura Otago Museum whisper dishes out of the ground and threw them around...
The wind ripped the Tūhura Otago Museum whisper dishes out of the ground and threw them around the Museum Reserve. PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER
Queenstown resident Jana Purington fills sandbags at the waterfront as a precautionary measure....
Queenstown resident Jana Purington fills sandbags at the waterfront as a precautionary measure. PHOTO: SUPPLIED

The severe weather of yesterday has passed and the MetService has lifted all warnings, but the impact remains felt throughout Dunedin and the South this morning.

Over 4000 households remain without power across Dunedin and Mosgiel, the Aurora Energy website showed at 7.40am today.

The site showed an estimated time of noon for power to be restored to all remaining affected areas.

State Highways 1 and 8, between Gore and McNab, and Lawrence and Waitahuna, respectively have been reopened. However, several other highways remained closed.

Meanwhile the University of Otago has confirmed exams will go ahead today, after been postponed yesterday.

Yesterday a 10-minute spell of mind-blowingly strong wind wreaked havoc and caused widespread disruption in Dunedin yesterday uprooting massive trees, tearing branches from trunks and leaving people struggling to stand.

The wind, which landed about 1.40pm, blew over fences, ripped out train signals and signs, lifted roofs, blew over 2.5-tonne shipping containers and left some residents without power overnight.

The biggest gust recorded by Port Otago was 170kmh at Taiaroa Head at 1.50pm, though gusts hovered around 100kmh for several hours after that.

In the inner city, the port’s equipment recorded the strongest gust, of 100kmh, at 1.40pm at the T-shed on the wharf.

MetService officially recorded a top wind speed of 72kmh in the city.

At the peak of the storm, more than 16,000 homes and businesses in Otago were without power.

In the more spectacular scenes of tree carnage around the city, two massive trees in Anzac Ave outside the Hocken Library, planted 100 years ago for the South Seas Exhibition, were ripped from the ground taking tonnes of roots and dirt with them, mirroring a scene from a Hollywood disaster film.

The weather was even worse in Southland, where the storm, with similar severity, took several hours to pass, causing extensive damage to power lines, roads and services and leaving large parts of the province without power.

An SUV and caravan block State Highway 86 on the Allanton Bridge after high winds flipped the...
An SUV and caravan block State Highway 86 on the Allanton Bridge after high winds flipped the caravan during yesterday's storm. PHOTO: GERARD O'BRIEN
MetService issued coastal Southland and South Otago with a red wind warning about noon and, minutes later, the wind arrived.

Further north, in the Queenstown Lakes area Lakes Wakatipu and Wanaka were still rising last night, though levels were expected to peak this morning. Some surface flooding is expected in Glenorchy and Kingston as a result.

Despite the chaos, there were few reports of injuries.

One person received a moderate injury in an accident on State Highway 1 near Milton, and a woman whose van was crushed by a falling tree as she drove in Invercargill escaped injury.

In Dunedin, Knox Church lost more than 100 tiles from its roof.

Church Deacon Paul Crack said the tiles blew off in the extraordinary gust of wind.

He believed it was the first time the tiles had been blown off the roof since the church was built in 1870.

"We are trying to find them as they are dangerous slate tiles, sharp as knives. We don’t want them flying through the air," he said.

A group of pickleball players ran for their lives when the roof started to rip apart at the Otago Badminton Centre in Victoria Rd.

"Sheets of iron started peeling off ... rubbish, polystyrene and asbestos started floating around the room — I thought the whole thing was going to go," Christine Ebbett said.

Ms Ebbett said they were running down a walkway between two buildings when roofing iron blocked their way.

"When we drove home it was quite frightening as well — all the traffic lights were swinging back and forward very fast."

Logan Park was covered in branches and two large trees fell across Butts Rd, blocking traffic.

The wind had also caused some damage to the Dunedin Ice Stadium roof and at Forbury Park, while the Dunedin Railway Station lost tiles from part of its roof and Forsyth Barr Stadium suffered minor damage to some roof flashings.

The University of Otago postponed exams in the afternoon.

Dunedin City Council city services general manager Scott MacLean said the council had logged more than 50 jobs across the city’s roading network, mainly involving fallen trees.

Contractors were clearing and reopening roads only where it was safe to do so.

He asked that water be conserved as power outages had affected pump stations though the council was taking a precautionary approach.

Several roads were blocked or closed after power lines were brought down.

Some tiles were ripped off the roof of Knox Church by the wind. PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER
Some tiles were ripped off the roof of Knox Church by the wind. PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER
A large tree in Spencer St, Andersons Bay, was also uprooted.

Multiple roads including several state highways around Milton, Gore and Mataura were closed for a couple of hours.

Port Otago chief executive Kevin Winders said multiple 12m closed and empty dry shipping containers were toppled by the wind at the Ravensbourne depot.

"They each weigh about two and a-half tonnes, so the wind was pretty intense to be able to move them around like that."

They would use cranes to re-stack the containers today, if possible.

No staff members were around the containers when they fell.

The Dunedin Botanic Garden was closed about 2.30pm as was the Dunedin Waste Transfer Centre.

The whisper dishes outside Tūhura Otago Museum were

"ripped out of the ground like weeds" — the first time since they were built there about 30 years ago.

The exhibit allows people to whisper into one dish and be heard clearly by someone standing at the other dish, about 20m away.

Museum marketing manager Charlie Buchan said when the wind hit, everyone thought the windows were going to cave in.

"We looked out and then a big tree fell, and then we saw one of the whisper dishes take flight like a flying saucer."

Once the wind died down, staff went outside to secure the dishes.

MetService meteorologist Claire O'Connor said Dunedin reached 25°C just before the wind hit and dropped to 15°C within half an hour after it passed over the city.

MetService recorded a top gust of 83kmh at Dunedin Airport.

Nugget Point, in the Clutha District, recorded a top gust of 165kmh at what was a very exposed station, she said.

Invercargill’s top gust was 137kmh, and Gore recorded a 125kmh gust. She said this was due to Southland bearing the brunt of the front after it made landfall.

Southwest Cape, at the southern tip of Stewart Island, bore the full brunt of the wind, recording a top gust of 190kmh.

Aurora had multiple callouts for power outages throughout Dunedin and Central Otago-Queenstown Lakes as did PowerNet further south.

Strongest gusts

Dunedin city 72kmh
Dunedin Airport 83kmh
Nugget Point 165kmh
Invercargill 137kmh
Gore 125kmh
Southwest Cape 190kmh

Source: MetService

 

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