Suggest you read the thread just below on battery upgrade.
To summarise, the main current draws are fridge and navigation gear - the former is typically 25-30AH (running about 25-30% of time at 3-4amps) and navigation including autopilot around 30-35AH at a typical 10-12 hour sailing day. Add around 10AH for lights, radio and pumps you are looking at 70-80AH. Night sailing with nav lights obviously adds more. So if you ignore any charge you need a nominal battery capacity of 200AH+ to keep within 50% discharge. The typical Bavaria OE was a single 140AH lead acid and an optional of the same size, so 280AH. This is more than adequate for "normal" UK cruising. As to charging, 2 hours motoring a day will put in 20-30AH (as well as be good for your engine).
In practice most people motor for more than 2 hours a day - not unusual to spend 40%+ passage time motoring, but even if you only do 2 hours a day your deficit is around 40AH out of your nominal 280. I would suggest a 100w solar panel would more than replace this if you are on a swinging mooring. It really is not the same as the Med - your energy consumption is far less in the UK, primarily because of the lower fridge requirements, and generally speaking people spend far less nights at anchor. Have a look around at other similar boats and you will find that very few have significant solar or wind as they manage their energy consumption well within the sort of battery capacity that is suggested above.
Suggest you run with what you have for a year and monitor your actual energy use. Even if you do find your service bank runs down, you can still start your engine independently. If you feel the need to improve your system then the priorities for expenditure are first reducing consumption (LEDS, insulating the fridge or simply keeping frozen liquid in it all the time) then improving the performance of your batteries. AGMs have greater usable capacity, higher charge acceptance and lower self discharge than flooded lead acid.