Grim-faced weather forecasters predict a dry Easter in the wake of
this latest downfall that will leave 20-40mm of rain to soak into dry
soil and top up draining reserves.
"That's a good start, a very
good start, considering how little rain we've had," Weather Watch
analyst Richard Green said on Monday.
"But what we really need is
70 to 100mm spread over three different events if we're going to fix
this problem. The trouble is we don't see those back-up events coming
through."
Rain finally came to New Zealand over the weekend, with
every centre recording anything from 2mm in Wellington up to 30mm on the
West Coast on Sunday.
Rainfall was expected to continue across
much of the country on Monday and into Tuesday, bringing grief for the
cricket at Wellington's Basin Reserve but relief to the capital's
stretched water reserves.
But it's not to last.
"I don't want to be the bearer of bad
news - we're trying to be positive here - but things aren't looking good
for later in the week and next week," Mr Green said.
"There was some hope that Easter could be wet (but) there's an anticyclone around so that's looking increasingly unlikely."
The
whole of the North Island has been declared a drought zone, a situation
that looks set to cost the national economy up to $NZ2 billion ($A1.6
billion)
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