A layer of frost has coated much of the country this morning.
MetService said that clear skies and overnight temperatures would mean frosts were likely across much of the South Island and parts of the lower central North Island this morning.
Sunshine is on the cards for most places tomorrow. However, the clearing skies also mean that overnight temperatures will be cold with morning frosts in many places. Here is the frost risk for tomorrow morning. Check your forecast at https://t.co/Yjbq0jxdqz ^SG pic.twitter.com/IeRFVWQpxp
— MetService (@MetService) June 21, 2018
Wellingtonians woke to a rare frost and a temperature of 1.7°C, with -3° in Upper Hutt and -1° in Kāpiti.
Ice on overhead lines affected some trains on the Kāpiti and Hutt Valley lines into the captial this morning, but Metlink said services were returning to normal.
It was a frosty start in south too with -3.2° for Christchurch, -3.1° in Queenstown and -0.5° in Nelson.
❄️❄️ pic.twitter.com/sRIlHugppl
— Scott McKenzie (@scttrmcknz) June 21, 2018
The sudden drop in temperatures coincided with yesterday's winter solstice, the shortest day of the year in the Southern Hemisphere.
MetService said weather for Friday would be mainly fine and dry throughout the country, if cold.
How is it 2°?!
— Jordan Carter (@jordantcarter) June 21, 2018
So cold in #wellington that even the trains can't move.
— Alec (@AotearoaAlec) June 21, 2018
The perennial issue of ice on the overhead lines.
Is this what living in a first world country is?
The weekend is also forecast to be fine, however Sunday could bring rain to the North Island and gales and snow to 500m in the South Island.