Fireball in the Sky: Mysterious Flash Over Wellington and Canterbury Sparks Meteor Speculation
By Lions Roar Aotearoa Science & Environment Desk
WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND (Saturday, January 31, 2026) — New Zealanders from the capital city down to the Canterbury plains were treated to a spectacular celestial display late Friday night, as a brilliant flash of light streaked across the southern sky.
The event, which occurred at approximately 11:25 PM on Friday, January 30, has led experts and stargazers alike to believe a significant meteor—or “fireball”—entered the Earth’s atmosphere over the Cook Strait.
📸 Captured on Camera
While many saw the flash, a high-definition live feed camera owned by PredictWind.com, located at the Heretaunga Boating Club in Petone, managed to capture the entire sequence.
- The Visual: The footage shows a distinct, glowing orb with a long, luminous tail.
- Trajectory: The object appeared over the Eastern Hutt Hills and traveled on a nearly horizontal path from East to West.
- Appearance: Observers described it as starting as a small point of light before expanding into a bright blue-green flash that briefly illuminated the entire Wellington Harbour.
🔭 Eyewitness Accounts
Social media was flooded with reports within minutes of the sighting, with descriptions coming from a wide geographical range:
“It looked like the sun turned on for just a second. The whole backyard lit up,” said one resident in Blenheim.
- Wellington: Multiple reports of a “horizontal shooting star” moving toward the Tasman Sea.
- Canterbury: Residents as far south as Christchurch reported seeing a bright flash on the northern horizon at the exact same time.
- Duration: The event lasted roughly 3 to 5 seconds before the object appeared to burn up or vanish behind the horizon.
☄️ Was it a Meteor?
Astronomers suggest the characteristics—the horizontal trajectory and the bright tail—are consistent with a bolide, a type of exceptionally bright meteor that often explodes in the atmosphere.
- Color: The blue-green hue reported by many suggests a high magnesium or nickel content within the space rock.
- Sonic Boom: As of Saturday morning, there have been no confirmed reports of a sonic boom, suggesting the meteor may have burned up at a very high altitude.
📊 Incident Summary
| Feature | Details |
| Time | Friday, January 30, 2026, at 11:25 PM |
| Visibility | Wellington, Marlborough, Nelson, and Canterbury |
| Source of Footage | PredictWind.com (Heretaunga Boating Club, Petone) |
| Direction | East to West (Horizontal trajectory) |
| Likely Cause | Bolide / Meteor entry |
