When Palmerston North resident Steve Wrathall saw some peculiar-looking clouds in the sky, the first thing he thought of was Dr Seuss.
"They looked like a wave, kind of like a tsunami," said Wrathall, who photographed the clouds as they moved across the Tararua Ranges.
As it turns out, the strange formations aren't called Dr Seuss clouds, but something perhaps just as odd-sounding: Kelvin-Helmholtz instability waves.
Named after Scots-Irish scientist Lord Kelvin William Thomson and German physician and physicist Hermann von Helmholtz, the formation was relatively uncommon and there needed to be certain conditions in the atmosphere - and its surrounds - for the breaking waves, or swans, to occur.
Those conditions include moist air in a "stable situation" - no upward movement - and a steady wind source.
WeatherWatch's Phillip Duncan told the Bay of Plenty Times last year that the wave clouds acted much like waves in the ocean and it was often "hard to get them and hard to predict them".
"I've seen very few of them in my whole career.
"It's definitely not very frequent. It's pretty rare to see them here."
Even more dramatic Kelvin-Helmholtz instability waves were spotted over Palmerston North last year.
And today, they weren't the only jaw-dropping clouds hovering over New Zealand.