Wednesday continued the pattern of thick, low cloud trapped under the high pressure dome. Once again there was little air movement, a maximum movement of just 8mph was logged on one occasion but for long periods the anemometer was stationary. The one slight variation was the moisture in the air from very light drizzle on occasions that amounted to 0.6mm of precipitation.
Once again, due to thick cloud limiting the rise in temperature by day and fall overnight produced a maximum of 11.8C at 13.13 being 1.5C above average and a minimum of 9.2C at 03.27 early Thursday, which was 5.2C above average. Thus a difference of just 2.6C called the diurnal range of temperatures.
Thursday was a repeat of the previous five days as daylight on Thursday revealed low, thick cloud once again draping the Marlborough Downs and Savernake Forest limiting visibility to 700m, slightly better than previous days. The humidity at 08.00 was 100% with again moisture being felt in the air from very light drizzle. The barometric pressure continues very high with a reading of 1031.2mb at 08.00.
The lack of wind and virtually no solar energy is resulting in minimal green energy being produced across much of the country. My 16 solar panels, facing south, struggled on Wednesday to produce just 1.2Kwh, which was slightly better than 0.46Kwh on Sunday that coincided with no UV triggering the sensor, yesterday peaked at 0.6.