Next 24 Hours in Putaruru-Arapuni, Putaruru
Next 9 Days in Putaruru-Arapuni, Putaruru
Thu 3 Jul
Thu 3 Jul
17Β°
Day
13Β°
Night
Thunderstorms. Breezy Northerly winds.
N
18km/h
80%
chance
of rain
16.1mm
Thunderstorms. Breezy Northerly winds.
Fri 4 Jul
Fri 4 Jul
15Β°
Day
10Β°
Night
Rain. Breezy Nor'West winds.
NW
15km/h
90%
chance
of rain
7.5mm
Rain. Breezy Nor'West winds.
Sat 5 Jul
Sat 5 Jul
15Β°
Day
5Β°
Night
A mix of sun and cloud. Light Southerly winds.
S
10km/h
20%
chance
of rain
trace
A mix of sun and cloud. Light Southerly winds.
Sun 6 Jul
Sun 6 Jul
13Β°
Day
4Β°
Night
A mix of sun and cloud. Light Sou'East winds.
SE
11km/h
10%
chance
of rain
trace
A mix of sun and cloud. Light Sou'East winds.
Mon 7 Jul
Mon 7 Jul
14Β°
Day
5Β°
Night
Partly cloudy. Light East to Sou'East winds.
ESE
10km/h
10%
chance
of rain
trace
Partly cloudy. Light East to Sou'East winds.
Tue 8 Jul
Tue 8 Jul
13Β°
Day
8Β°
Night
Afternoon showers. Light Easterly winds.
E
13km/h
50%
chance
of rain
4.6mm
Afternoon showers. Light Easterly winds.
Wed 9 Jul
Wed 9 Jul
13Β°
Day
9Β°
Night
Light rain. Light East to Nor'East winds.
ENE
12km/h
60%
chance
of rain
8.2mm
Light rain. Light East to Nor'East winds.
Thu 10 Jul
Thu 10 Jul
14Β°
Day
10Β°
Night
Light rain. Light Nor'East winds.
NE
10km/h
60%
chance
of rain
9.7mm
Light rain. Light Nor'East winds.
Fri 11 Jul
Fri 11 Jul
13Β°
Day
8Β°
Night
Rain. Breezy North to Nor'East winds.
NNE
15km/h
60%
chance
of rain
11.2mm
Rain. Breezy North to Nor'East winds.
Comments
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WeatherObserver on 1/07/2025 8:11am
1. If tornadoes are meant to be rare in NZ then why we are getting so many of these recently (in fact I have heard in the news at least once for almost every low recently). Also if a tornado is touching down anywhere in NZ, does it mean a βsupercellβ storm has formed as it does in the USA?
2. It hasnβt been too cold recently. When can I next expect some very cold and wintry burst of weather?
3. What does temperature for each hour in the trends graph show, average, lowest or the exact temperature for that particular time e.g. 1:00pm? Same goes for the outlooks and 9-day forecasts.
Reply
WW Forecast Team on 1/07/2025 8:03pm
Hi there.
1. Not every βtornadoβ quoted by the news is actually a tornado. Many are squall winds (or straight line winds) which create similar damage but arenβt actually a tornado. NZβs news media is well known for misuing the term (even Wikipedia mentions it). NZ gets many EF0 and EF1 tornados β but most hit rural places so arenβt seen or documented.
2. Not sure yet β nothing on the horizon.
3. Itβs what we expect the conditions to be at that timeβ¦.if it says 17 degrees 1pm Thursday then that is what we are forecasting for that time.
Kind regards
β WW
Reply
Cris on 27/06/2025 8:12pm
Having reviewed Observations in my area for a few weeks now I am either in the middle of a lot of turbulence or some people do not know how to accurately report their observed wind directions. Do you have any process on how you choose which are authentic or just average out for your reporting? Is it worth your contacting all the observers on your contributing database and explaining that the wind direction stated is the direction it is coming from β not going to. i.e. A southerly wind is a wind that originates from the south and blows towards the north. In other words, itβs a wind coming from the south.
Reply
Felicity on 28/06/2025 8:10pm
So how it works is that everyday people who have decent weather stations register them to a weather website so the data is shared with that site. Weather watch publishes that so we can see what is happening with the observed weather closer to our homes rather than just the main centres. If our wifi goes out or we have problems with the station then the data wonβt upload or the station will be showing odd things. Weather watch canβt contact any of us and donβt control our stations, theyβre just sharing our data which I assume they purchase from the website. The more people who have these weather stations that are shared the more data for weather watch to use and the easier it will be for other people to find a station that is in a microclimate that best reflects their own. Does that make sense?
Reply
David Briggs on 26/06/2025 11:31pm
Can you explain why the rain radar maps that the Met Service provide have such a bizarre colour scheme? It makes them very hard to read, and as a geographer it breaks my heart to see a system that has no logical progression from low to high in it. Other countries seem to use much more intuitive spectral scales.
Reply
Dylan on 26/06/2025 2:44am
Hi Phil, when the forecast for a particular location says x amount of rain today, and then x amount of rain tonight β between which hours is today, and between which is tonight? Hope that makes sense.
Reply
WW Forecast Team on 26/06/2025 4:31am
Hi Dylan, the βTodayβ rainfall goes from 6am to 6pm, βTonightβ covers 6pm to 6am. Rainfall totals update hourly, which means on the day itself those totals can shift around, especially if there are isolated heavy downpours around your region.
Under βTrendsβ in the WeatherWatch App, or at RuralWeather.co.nz you can also see rainfall in clearer visual/graph form, which helps work out general start, peak and end time of rain events. Along with forecast totals.
Hope that helps!
β WW
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