Tourists from mainland China visit the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront in Hong Kong at the start of the Golden Week holiday period (Photo by Peter PARKS / AFP)
Tourists from mainland China visit the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront in Hong Kong at the start of the Golden Week holiday period (Photo by Peter PARKS / AFP)

HONG KONG: Hong Kong was lashed by nearly 10,000 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes from Tuesday night to Wednesday morning, according to data from the city's weather observatory.

The Chinese city is accustomed to high humidity levels during April leading up to monsoon season, with residents prepared for sudden downpours during their workday commutes.

Beginning 9.00 pm Tuesday evening, Hong Kong skies put on a flashy display, with the observatory recording 5,914 lightning bolts in a single hour as rain bucketed down.

By 10.59 am on Wednesday, it had recorded 9,437 ground-to-lighting strikes, with the majority hitting Hong Kong's New Territories East region.

China’s consumer prices rose for a third straight month in April (Photo by Peter PARKS / AFP)
China’s consumer prices rose for a third straight month in April (Photo by Peter PARKS / AFP)

Hong Kong island was the second-largest recipient of strikes, with towering residential buildings lit up by the near-constant bolts.

Tuesday night's thunderstorm also caused delays at Hong Kong's international airport, while in the eastern Sai Kung region, violent winds whipped at a Cantonese opera theatre made up of bamboo scaffolding, according to video shared on social media.

The observatory said Wednesday that showers and "squally thunderstorms" would continue through the evening and into Thursday.

The city had planned a pyrotechnics show on Wednesday evening to mark May 1, the start of China's Golden Week in which Chinese travellers were expected to holiday in Hong Kong. — AFP