Spring 2024 was one of the warmest on record, new NIWA climate summary figures show.
It was also a very wet season for Southland and Otago.
"Several locations in the southern South Island received more than double their usual spring rainfall," NIWA (the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research) noted in its summary.
It was the wettest spring on record in Dunedin, Invercargill and Gore.
However, it was very dry for the eastern North Island, where rain was below normal in much of Northland, Coromandel, Bay of Plenty and the East Coast.
Twelve locations saw record or near-record low rainfall, including Napier with just 27 percent of its normal spring rain total.
Spring was also the seventh warmest on record for Aotearoa, and 20 locations saw record or near-high record temperatures for spring.
The highest temperature was 32.1C, observed at Bromley in Christchurch on 28 November, while the lowest temperature was -7.8C at Lake Tekapo on 17 September.
The nationwide average temperature for spring was 12.9C, which is 0.8C above the 1991-2020 average.
Kaitaia, Kawerau and Paraparaumu all saw their warmest mean air temperatures on record, NIWA said.
Of the six main centres, Auckland was the warmest, Dunedin was the coolest and wettest, Tauranga was the sunniest, Christchurch was the driest, and Wellington was the least sunny.
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