Next 24 Hours in Alexandra
Next 9 Days in Alexandra
Sun 12 Apr
Sun 12 Apr
19°
Day
6°
Night
Mostly cloudy. Light North to Nor'East winds.
NNE
11km/h
20%
chance
of rain
1.3mm
Mostly cloudy. Light North to Nor'East winds.
Mon 13 Apr
Mon 13 Apr
16°
Day
7°
Night
Afternoon showers. Light Nor'West winds.
NW
10km/h
40%
chance
of rain
1.9mm
Afternoon showers. Light Nor'West winds.
Tue 14 Apr
Tue 14 Apr
16°
Day
6°
Night
Partly cloudy. Light Nor'West winds.
NW
11km/h
20%
chance
of rain
1.4mm
Partly cloudy. Light Nor'West winds.
Wed 15 Apr
Wed 15 Apr
14°
Day
6°
Night
Partly cloudy. Breezy West to Nor'West winds.
WNW
14km/h
20%
chance
of rain
1.1mm
Partly cloudy. Breezy West to Nor'West winds.
Thu 16 Apr
Thu 16 Apr
16°
Day
6°
Night
Showers - track on rain radar. Light North to Nor'West winds.
NNW
13km/h
70%
chance
of rain
5.4mm
Showers - track on rain radar. Light North to Nor'West winds.
Fri 17 Apr
Fri 17 Apr
12°
Day
5°
Night
Showers. Calm/Variable winds.
NW
8km/h
60%
chance
of rain
4.4mm
Showers. Calm/Variable winds.
Sat 18 Apr
Sat 18 Apr
11°
Day
6°
Night
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
S
9km/h
40%
chance
of rain
4.5mm
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
Sun 19 Apr
Sun 19 Apr
9°
Day
5°
Night
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
S
11km/h
50%
chance
of rain
4.3mm
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
Mon 20 Apr
Mon 20 Apr
10°
Day
5°
Night
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
S
9km/h
40%
chance
of rain
2.5mm
Showers. Light Southerly winds.
Comments
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Kathy on 11/04/2026 7:17am
Great website for current weather – not sure there are any others as good
Reply
Bruce on 11/04/2026 12:00am
Under Maps and Radar > Wind > MajicWeather Wind Forecast. The colour is based on the surface (2m) temperature, and varies from dark blue below freezing, up to green at around 10-15°c, yellow around 25-30°c and red at about 40°c.
Am I correct in assuming that the light colour (white) between the green and yellow is approximate temperature of around 16-24, or is it just light yellow?
Reply
WW Forecast Team on 11/04/2026 4:10am
Hi Bruce, the white (brightness) areas represent the strength of the wind, being severe gale and above – not the temperature. Hope that helps.
Cheers
– WW
Reply
Abigail on 10/04/2026 3:25am
Hi Phil and team WeatherWatch!
Always love and appreciate your work and your informative and calm forecasts.
Quick q about the rain totals for Auckland broken down hourly – the break down is done from 7am-6am but the overall total is done by the day – so Saturday 11 April has a very high rain total but when you break it down by hour the worst of it kicks off from about 1am onwards which technically informs the total for the day, for Sunday 12 April.
So at first glance Saturday’s total rain total for the day looks worse than Sunday’s….until you break it down by hour.
Also do you expect these totals to change tomorrow as they have been mostly consistent-ish for the last few days based on the modelling I assume?
Thanks,
Abigail
Just wondering if this is intentional?
Reply
WW Forecast Team on 10/04/2026 11:32am
Hi Abigail, thanks for your message. The way we receive the data comes in 12 hour blocks so there is basically a daytime rainfall and a nightime rainfall, so rain that is coming in overnight can show up in the prior day’s rainfall total. In our app and at RuralWeather.co.nz you can better see the rainfall in graph form so that it’s much clearer as to when that rain will fall, and how heavy it will be.
As for the totals to change – yes – because the centre of this cyclone is coming in near Auckland the precise tracking of that centre matters a lot at working out heaviest rain and strongest winds. Cyclones can wobble left and right and that may shift the future tracking, and therefore your rainfall. Our data updates each hour, so worth keeping an eye on. MetService warnings cover what is possible though and as with any rainband if it slows down the forecast rainfall totals will increase, if the storm moves faster that will decrease rainfall. Quite a few moving parts to it all!
– WW
Reply
Carla on 9/04/2026 10:45pm
Hi Phil, Can you explain why the windspeeds for the incoming cyclone differ considerably between your rural weather forecast and the Met office warnings?
I have looked at the Whangarei wind forecast for Saturday and Sunday and it is 39km/h with gusts of up to 71km/h max on Saturday and and 40km/h with gusts of 74km/h max on Sunday.
The Met office predicts from 11pm Sat, 11 Apr – 2pm Sun, 12 Apr: Severe gale southeasterlies changing to severe gale southwesterlies during Sunday afternoon, gusting 130km/h in exposed places. Moderate chance of upgrading to a Red Warning.
Since we overlook the sea we do get more rain and wind than Whangarei itself sometimes, so I looked up Taiharuru as well and there the wind is 47km/h with 78km/h gusts.
From past experience I know that they tend to try and cover all eventualities, however this seems to be a big gap this time.
Any ideas?
Reply
WW Forecast Team on 10/04/2026 1:27am
Hi Carla, the MetService warnings are for the region you are in, with highest wind speeds and rainfall quite often in more exposed places (mountains, ranges, islands, extreme coastal areas) – hence their higher numbers as warnings capture what is POSSIBLE as well as what is LIKELY. Our data tries to look at what is likely, but in any storm event you can double your wind gusts or rainfall to get an idea as to what more exposed areas might be getting.
Our data also updates each hour, which on the day itself can be very helpful – and also can see our own numbers lift as data gets more locked in.
– WW
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