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HomeBoating NewsWeather UpdatesCyclone Vaianu, Evening Briefing, Sunday 12 April

Cyclone Vaianu, Evening Briefing, Sunday 12 April

KEYPOINTS
Apr 12, 2026 9:37 PM
RNZ Live
Bay of Plenty evacuees able to return home if safe
Those who have been evacuated in the Bay of Plenty are now able to return home, as long as it is safe for them to do so.
Whakatāne acting mayor Julie Jukes said the evacuation order was no longer in place.
A total of 270 households in Ōhope and Thornton were forced to evacuate, while an unknown number had chosen to.
Jukes said the weather had died down as of 9pm on Sunday.
However the extreme wind, along with storm surges, earlier on Sunday had caused a significant amount of damage.
“We’re still working to get the full picture,” Jukes said.
A lot of trees had fallen, but the rest of the damage was still unknown.
Jukes said Whakatāne would be visited by the Minister for Emergency Management and Recovery Mark Mitchell in the morning

Vaianu moves on, leaving significant damage in its wake

Cyclone Vaianu has tracked across the northern North Island and is now moving away to the southeast, expected to pass the Chatham Islands on Monday morning. The day’s most severe impacts fell on the Coromandel Peninsula and Bay of Plenty, where Red Warnings remained in force through the afternoon, thousands of homes lost power, and communities including Whitianga, Ohope and Whakatane were cut off or evacuated. Whakatane took a particularly hard hit, with roofs lifted, trees uprooted, and around 270 households in Ohope and Thornton had been evacuated ahead of the storm as a precaution.

Seas remain dangerous after dark

For boaties, conditions remain serious well into tonight. The worst seas are now south and east of the cyclone’s track, with a Storm Warning on Hawke Bay where northeast winds reached 50 knots gusting to 65, and northeast swell building to 7 metres in the Portland zone off the East Cape coast. A Heavy Swell Warning remains in force for the Wairarapa coast until 3am Monday, with combined waves of up to 6 metres expected to peak around the midnight high tide at Cape Palliser. Cook Strait is building through the evening as the system moves through. The Hauraki Gulf and Waitemata are easing, but both were still running westerly 30 to 35 knots gusting to 50 as of the 4:30pm forecasts, with northeast swell of 2.5 metres in the Gulf.

Chris Newman, who has been at Great Mercury all day on his boat, has been providing updates as the day goes on, his final update is below:

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Monday: better, but not done yet

Conditions should be manageable across the north by Monday morning, though an unstable westerly flow moves in during the day bringing the risk of thunderstorms through the afternoon and evening. Swell takes time to subside after winds ease, and gale warnings remain in place for Colville Channel, Bay of Plenty offshore and Castlepoint into Monday. Anyone planning to get back on the water should check the latest MetService forecasts carefully before heading out. The week ahead looks unsettled, with a series of fronts crossing from the west Tuesday through Friday and further heavy rain and thunderstorm risk on Tuesday in particular.

The windsurfer who wasted everyone’s time

The Napier Coastguard had a timely reminder for anyone tempted to make the most of the conditions: a windsurfer spotted in rough seas near Napier Port during the state of emergency tied up two police cars and nearly triggered a rescue operation. Coastguard told him plainly he had wasted precious resources.

A man windsurfing in rough seas near Napier has been told off by the coastguard for wasting precious resources during a state of emergency. Photo credit: Facebook

This article is written by Boating New Zealand with inputs from MetService and RNZ.co.nz

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Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor. Web Editors of Boating NZ

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