A raft of flights have been cancelled or delayed at Wellington Airport amid high winds.
An airport spokesperson said since 5pm on Thursday there had been 28 flights cancelled, including one international flight from Brisbane diverted to Christchurch.
Air New Zealand spokesperson David Morgan said the airline was working on re-accommodating customers, but seats on some flights were limited because of the long weekend.
Orange strong wind warnings were in place for Wairarapa, Wellington and the Marlborough Sounds from Thursday until 10am Friday.
MetService warned those in the lower North Island and upper South Island of severe gale northwesterlies gusting up to 120 kilometres an hour in exposed places.
Fire and Emergency said it had sent firefighters to three places where building or roof materials were reportedly lifting in the wind, and two callouts for low-hanging powerlines or telephone lines.
A StraitNZ Bluebridge spokesperson confirmed high winds delayed berthing of one of its vessels in Wellington on Thursday evening.
"The ship has since berthed, but this does have the flow on effect of delays into the evening and tomorrow morning."
A KiwiRail spokesperson said the company was monitoring the situation, but "at this stage we are not expecting any disruption to the Interislander due to weather".
A taxi driver reported seeing cyclists blown off their bikes by wind gusts in Evans Bay, near the airport.
A strong wind warning was also in place for the Canterbury High Country until 1am Friday.
Heavy rain warnings were issued for the Tararua Range, Westland, and the ranges of the Buller, Grey and Tasman districts until Friday morning.
⚠️ We're watching the likelihood that the weekend will begin with impactful weather on Saturday.
— NIWA Weather (@NiwaWeather) October 24, 2024
️ Heavy rain will affect much of the South Island, and at least localised flooding cannot be ruled out.
The North Island will see a period of heavy rain and gusty winds. pic.twitter.com/3Oc2qkw9yI
Further heavy rain was expected Friday evening and Saturday in some areas.
The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (Niwa) said in a post on X that heavy rain would affect most of the South Island.
"At least localised flooding cannot be ruled out."
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