As wild weather lashes the South Island today, nature has displayed her awesome power with a terrifying display atop a popular ski field.
The moment was captured by a webcam at Lake Ōhau Snow Fields, showing the moment that lightning struck one of the chair lifts.
The eerie photo shows the lightning strike the metal chair lift, which was fortunately unoccupied after the ski field was closed due to the weather.
An amazing capture from our webcam this morning," the ski field wrote on Facebook.
"Just in case you were wondering why we are closed today."
Meanwhile. strong winds battered parts of the South, bringing down trees and prompting warnings for motorists.
Several trees or branches came down around Dunedin overnight, including one that fell on a vehicle on Stevenson Rd in Concord.
Police said the tree had tangled in power lines. The Dunedin City Council (DCC) and power company were notified.
There was a tree blocking Portobello Rd in Vauxhall shortly before 3am and one on George St about 6.45am, police said.
The DCC website reported several road closures around the city because of fallen trees.
Elsewhere, a trampoline ended up wrapped around a power pole in Statham St in the Dunedin suburb of Brockville.
The winds reached more than 100km/h in some places.
The strong northwesterlies precede a cold front which hit the South Island from the Tasman Sea last night, and is moving northeast across the South Island today.
A MetService spokesman said the front should bring heavy rain to western parts of the South Island and severe gale northwesterlies to exposed parts in the east.
An orange warning has been issued for the headwaters of the Otago lakes and rivers, which can expect up to 130mm of rain to accumulate near the main divide by 4pm today.
Up to 100mm of rain might accumulate within 15km east of the divide, and peak rates of up to 20mm per hour and thunderstorms were possible, he said.
An orange warning has also been issued for Fiordland, which can expect up to 130mm of rain to accumulate from Milford Sound northwards, and up to 100mm further south.
Peak rates of up to 20mm per hour and thunderstorms are also possible.
''Heavy rain may cause streams and rivers to rise rapidly. Surface flooding and slips are also possible and driving conditions may be hazardous.''
However, on the other side of the South Island, temperatures are expected to reach 20C and orange warnings for severe gales have been issued.
Between 1am and 4pm today, northwesterly gales were forecast to reach 120km/h in exposed parts of the Southern Lakes, Central Otago, Clutha, Dunedin and North Otago, he said.
The situation would be the same for Southland, Fiordland and Stewart Island until 2pm.
''Strong wind gusts could damage trees, powerlines and unsecured structures,'' he said.
Driving might be hazardous and checking the latest forecasts was advised.
- Additional reporting, NZ Herald