Wharfie, there are millions of places and hundreds of countries and for any particular day, or month, there are going to be many places which are having their warmest, or coldest, or wettest, or most snow-covered, or windiest, or cloudiest, or sunniest, time since records began.
That's just how probabilities work.
New Zealand did NOT have its warmest winter ever. It would have been nice if Australia had shared some of their warm winter with us.
When winter is warm, or more accurately, less cold, it isn't something to be endured, it's something to be enjoyed: <Australia has endured an exceptionally hot winter, > The choice of the word "endured" shows the bias of the writers and shows their information is not worth reading because they are obviously dishonest.
A brief and dry 34 degrees Celsius in one location is not something to be endured. That would have been a great day. Perhaps the people doing that particular singular measurement held the thermometer in the sun?
Mqurice |