Canterbury is on the verge of a 20th century-style drought with the southern region the driest it has been in a decade, forcing farmers to sell surplus stock and leading to restrictions on irrigation as the area waits for rain.
Soil moisture in eastern and southern Canterbury is between severely and extremely drier than normal, while the outlook for rain is light, Niwa data shows.
The region, which suffered crippling droughts through the 1970s to 1990s, is the driest it has been for a decade, said Ivon Hurst, Federated Farmers' South Canterbury president.
"We are in what you would call a drought - not an emergency, official drought where the Government has to come in and give assistance, but there is no moisture in the ground. We have a consistently dry weather pattern," Hurst said.