"Some of the farmers that we talk to have told us their water tables were quite low," Mr Duncan said. "It's a real concern after the drought that we just had to have a dry end of winter before spring, which is typically windy, warmer and drier."
While rain was forecast for the coming weekend, the tropical low bringing it was similar to the one that passed over the weekend without bringing rain to Auckland.
"My feeling is that September's weather pattern has already arrived. We've already got the spring westerlies, which is unusual in August but it does happen sometimes. It doesn't rule out the chance of another snow storm, but the overall trend is certainly looking warm."
Niwa's principal scientist, Dr Andrew Tait, said the warmer than usual weather was expected to continue for the next three months.
"If you were a betting person you'd say we're probably in for more of the same."
The anticyclones that caused Auckland's settled winter weather also affected the South Island, with predominant northerly winds resulting in record high temperatures.
"There's been an unbelievable amount of records or near-records," Dr Tait said. "The anti-cyclones have been over the North Island and top half of the South Island, which has led to these really warm temperatures over the lower part of the South Island as well."
Big demand for winter water
Water trucks in tank-water-dependent eastern suburbs Beachlands and Maraetai have been running flat out thanks to the unseasonal dry spell.
Colleen Patchett of Maraetai Blue Water said the company had been making 10 deliveries a day, many of them to households caught out by the record dry spell and completely out of water. "We are running like summer months at the moment," Mrs Patchett said. "We have been flat out for days now."
Beachlands resident Duan Fowell bought a tanker of water on Friday, the first time in eight years the family of five has been forced to buy water during the winter. At this time of year he was more used to worrying about flooding on his front lawn than his water tank running dry, Mr Fowell said.
"I'd much rather have a nice, sunny winter and buy a little bit of water than have a wet winter," he said.
However, the present dry spell highlighted the problem of a suburb just 45 minutes' drive from Auckland's CBD being reliant on water tankers. The closest filling station to Beachlands had recently closed and the price of water deliveries had risen significantly.