This, the weather we've been having for the past five weeks, is what a "fairly average summer" in New Zealand looks like. I highlight this because in spring I said the weather pattern this summer looked "average" - and many interpreted that as "poor".
Of course some areas have had extreme weather - we've seen flooding, snow and houses burn to the ground - but for the most part severe summer weather has been isolated.
I told a Herald reporter this week that many of us shape our memories of summer when we are children, teens and young adults. Memories, quite often, of long, hot, dry summers, perhaps locked in at a young age during an impressive drought that you now can no longer recall, but you can remember the dry grass and endless blue sky days.
Times haven't changed, but as we get older those "long" summers aren't as long as we remembered.
Most adults I know remember summer lasting an eternity as a kid ... but that's a child's brain working, not the weather that's changed.