Windrush Weather

Author: Eric Gilbert

  • Hottest day and night this year

    In the intense sunshine on Thursday the thermometer soared to 28.5C making it the hottest day since 7th September 2021 (29.2C) and a significant 8.3C above the 38-year average.

    It was another dry day with the loss of equivalent rainfall through evaporation from ground sources and plant life reaching 50mm, far in excess of the 12.0mm of rainfall in June.

    The heatwave threshold for Wiltshire is three consecutive days with temperatures equal to or above 27.0C. For my station on the outskirts of town and the station well up the garden away from the influence of buildings and paved areas, this won’t quite be reached as Saturday is forecast to be cooler due to a cold front approaching the area. However, in the town where the buildings and paved surfaces hold more overnight warmth, it will likely that the threshold is reached.

    The news of extreme heat for London hits the headlines but normal Met Office data is from stations where the instruments are well away from buildings and paved areas.

    It has been a very warm night with the temperature overnight not falling below 13.7C, which was 3.6C above the average making it the warmest night since20th October.

    The sun on Friday was more muted first thing due to thin high cloud, however the thermometer had already reached 19.8C at 08.00. The light breeze has backed from the southwest to south and light.

    Update at 13.30: thermometer reached 30.0C at 13.25.

    Update at 18.25: maximum temperature of 31.3C, hottest for two years and only 0.9C below record set in 2017.

  • Highest temperature, evaporation and solar this month on Wednesday

    As the anticyclone edged closer the temperature on Wednesday rose even higher to reach a maximum of 26.2C, the highest since 8th September 2021 and 6.0C above the 38-year average.

    It was another dry day with just 12.0mm of rainfall this month. The heat and many hours of strong sunshine recently have increased the daily loss of equivalent rainfall through evaporation to 4.68mm and 4.76mm during the past two days. The equivalent loss of rainfall this month now totals 46mm, almost twice the actual rainfall.

    The thermometer fell way to 6.8C overnight but recovered to 17.8C at 08.00.

    Heatwave Threshold.
    The thermometer has to reach at least 27.0C for three consecutive days to be classed as a heatwave for Wiltshire. The possibility is that both Thursday and Friday could see that temperature reached but Saturday is forecast to be cooler.

    The official Met Office weather stations are situated on large grassed areas well away from any hard surfaces and buildings as these hold the heat. My weather station is on the northern edge of Marlborough and sited well up the garden, therefore a thermometer in the centre of town, midst buildings and solid surfaces, will register an even higher temperature than my station.

    Tomorrow I will include up to date data on recent heatwaves and the trends in frequency and temperature.

    Update at 19.20: maximum of 28.5C at 16.14. Highest daily maximum since 7th September 2021

  • Warmest day in eleven months on Tuesday

    Tuesday saw the thermometer soar to 24.7C, which was the warmest day since 26th July 2021 (26.6C) and 4.5C above the 38-year average, under the influence of the anticyclone.

    It was another dry day, the tenth this month, with the monthly rainfall still 12.0m when the average is 54.2mm and through evaporation still losing over 3mm of equivalent daily rainfall.

    Once again under clear skies the temperature dropped away, last night to a minimum of 5.8C being 4.3C below the average.

    Wednesday began with wonderful sunshine that lifted the temperature to 18.8C at 08.00. At that time the soil temperature at a depth of 5cm read 19.1C under the influence of many hours of sunshine and the soil drying out.

  • UV again Very High

    In the strong sunshine on Monday the UV level rose even higher with a value of 9.0, which was at the top end of Very High and the highest since 7th June 2021 (9.5).

    It was the sixth consecutive dry day with loss of equivalent rainfall due to evaporation of 3.6mm. Rainfall this month totals just 12.0mm and evaporation of 33m.

    The thermometer soared to 22.2C, which was 2.0C above the 38-year average, which was followed by a very cool night with the thermometer sinking to 4.6C at 04.58 on Tuesday being 5.5C below the average.

    Global sunshine reached 13.8 hours on each of the last three days. This is the highest value this year but it is almost mid-summer.

    Tuesday brought sunshine after dawn with the temperature recovering to 15.2C at 08.00.

  • Humidity begins to fall

    The ridge of high pressure, reaching in from mid-Atlantic, continues to dominate our weather. Sunday was another dry day with the equivalent of another 3.5mm of rainfall lost through evaporation from ground sources and plant life, that totals 32mm this month against the rainfall total of 12.0mm. The humidity at 08.00 on Monday was as low as 75% as the ground and air dry out under the many hours of sunshine and drying breeze.

    The thermometer rose to 20.4C, just above average on Sunday and last night fell to 8.0C being 2.1C below average.

    Monday brought strong sunshine after dawn with the temperature having recovered to 15.2C. The wind has veered a few degrees to come form the northwest, later to back again into the west or southwest. The barometric pressure at 08.00 read 1026.0mb, the highest this month.