Natural environment


Previous item. Next item.
Tō muri mai

Wellington’s winds

Wellington’s winds

Wellington’s winds

New Zealand sits astride the westerly wind drift. The capital is known as ‘windy Wellington’, but in fact average wind speeds there are not much higher than in other coastal cities such as Invercargill and Auckland. Its reputation stems more from the powerful gusts – over 60 km per hour – which blast the city 173 days a year, compared with 30 days a year for Rotorua and 35 for Nelson. Discarded, blown-out umbrellas are not an uncommon sight downtown, especially in spring.

Whai muri

Alexander Turnbull Library, Dominion Post Collection (PAColl-7327)
Reference: EP/1994/3964
Photograph by Phil Reid

Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa, must be obtained before any re-use of this image.




Whakaahua, Rauemi

Te Kōrero


Kei tēnei kōrero

 


He kōrero anō mō...
Kōrero Poto

 



Hōpara i Te Ara
English Maori