Despite a harshly quick descent into winter weather that many around the country would have uncomfortably noticed, temperatures across the cold season aren't predicted to be too bitter.
The National Institute of Water and Atmosphere (Niwa) issued its climate outlook today, projecting that temperatures were "very likely", with a probability of between 65 per cent and 80 per cent, to be above average in all regions.
This follows a run of unusually warm months -- February 2016 was the hottest on the books -- that meteorologists put down to a high number of northerlies, an absence of southerlies and unusually warm seas around the entire country.
Nevertheless, Niwa said, frosts would still occur from time to time in cooler places this winter.
And not all of New Zealand would get treated to the buffet of sunny, warm days that had been unusually dished up by autumn this year.