"So much for global warming." That's quite possibly one of the most common phrases I hear every time New Zealand has a cold snap. It's understandable people are confused by scientists telling us the world is heating up and to prepare for the worst, only to then be told August was the coldest on record.
However, there is a huge difference between what is gradually happening over a century, and the usual weather we'll continue to receive over the next few decades.
From the scientists I've spoken to, it sounds as though New Zealand will be one of the better-placed nations to cope with and adapt to climate change. Some suggest we will become a warmer, tropical paradise that could see grapes grown across Waikato and Northland and a climate that has mild winters and hot, humid summers.
But we're talking decades for this to happen, perhaps more than 100 years.
"Climate change is about a gradual shift in average conditions underlying the usual variations in the weather," says Dr James Renwick, associate professor at Victoria University's School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences.