Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - In July this year, I will go to the university in Wellington, New Zealand for an exchange semester. I wonder if there is heating in winter there? What should I bring? thank you

In July this year, I will go to the university in Wellington, New Zealand for an exchange semester. I wonder if there is heating in winter there? What should I bring? thank you

There is no domestic central heating, indoor heating is solved by ourselves, and it is not as hot as domestic heating, but it can't freeze.

One is a stove. A relatively new house like this burns wood instead of firewood, but it is not carbon-free.

And this:

The old house still continues the traditional stove, burning another material, but my family is not like this, I don't know what to burn. It's smokeless:

Then there is air conditioning for heating. My family is like this. Half the families in Wellington use air conditioning for heating.

Luggage is hard to say. It varies from person to person and suits me. I have lived in Wellington for 10 years, so I can give some advice on the weather.

One semester is July-165438+ 10. July is "deep winter" here. It won't snow, but the lowest temperature is 1 ~ 2 degrees, so you should take some cold coats.

Spring begins at the end of August, and summer begins at the end of 10, but the highest summer in Wellington (the end of 12) is 26 degrees, so there are few opportunities to wear short clothes, so it is better to bring less.

It is recommended to bring long-sleeved clothes in spring and autumn. If you live in a local home, you should prepare your own slippers. If the locals don't wear it, there won't be one at home.

Post a picture of the current temperature in Wellington. It's 8 o'clock in the evening and the outdoor temperature is 9 degrees.

Look at the average temperature on the Internet after graduation. The average temperature of a day can't reflect anything, it depends on the highest and lowest.