The natural world around us
We have to make people really fall in love with wildlife’
As Autumnwatch returns to BBC Two showcasing the natural world around us, Danielle de Wolfe speaks to the show’s presenters to discover more.
As temperatures dip and British wildlife begins to nestle down for the winter, the hard work is only just beginning for the BBC’s Autumnwatch team.
Returning for two weeks as part of the show’s annual installment, the BBC Two staple is once again set to highlight the wonders of the natural world – albeit with a number of Covidrelated tweaks.
“It’s not just a job for us, we absolutely live and breathe it,” says Autumnwatch presenter Michaela Strachan.
The show – which has been enjoyed by millions since its launch in 2005 – will feature footage collected from remote cameras, alongside prerecorded features and new live segments from presenters located across the country.
Autumnwatch 2020 will see Strachan broadcasting from Tentsmuir Forest in Fife, Scotland, a location renowned for its picturesque landscape and thriving seal population.
“I’m going to miss Chris ( Packham, her copresenter), I’m not going to lie, it’s going to be very different,” says Strachan of the new Covid friendly setup, which sees all four presenters bid farewell to the central studio.
“But because I am doing cute baby seals, oh boy am I going to go on and on about how cute they are!” she laughs.
Joined by copresenters Packham, who is set to report from his home in the New Forest, Iolo Williams from the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales, and Gillian Burke at RSPB Old Moor in South Yorkshire, the show is set to showcase the true beauty of Britain’s native wildlife.
With live cameras located on a wild Scottish island in the Firth of Forth set to capture dramatic footage of grey seals pupping, this time around the show hopes to act as a beacon of light in amongst the uncertainty of Covid.
“We have to make people really fall in love with wildlife, weave the conservation stories in with it and make people care and really want to make a difference. It’s something that we’re very aware of.”
Whether it’s a newly found appreciation for our metropolitan green spaces or an increased awareness of the local animal population, Covid has helped open the nation’s eyes to the natural world around us.
“It wasn’t that the wildlife wasn’t there, I just think that people have been seeing it without looking at it and they’ve been hearing it without listening to it – and there’s a subtle difference,” remarks Packham.
“With that extra five minutes that they had on their walk because they weren’t rushing to work or rushing to school, it gave them the time to stop and then engage a little bit more. And we hope that people don’t go back again to forgetting about it because it was an enormous benefit to them.”
It’s a theory seconded by fellow Autumnwatch presenter Burke, 42, who found herself locked down on the south coast during the spring instalment.
“Modern life is stressful,” she points out.
“We process a lot of information, whether it’s via our social media feed, via mainstream news outlets, it’s our work, it’s our jobs, it’s our kids, it’s our relationships.
“So nature – being able to access the outdoors, being able to watch a plant grow on your window box, watching the leaves turn colour in the autumn – is one way of getting some respite from those stresses in your life.”
“Being based in Cornwall, it was very interesting. Through Spring, apart from locals, the beaches were very, very quiet. We noticed more birds foraging on beaches where there would normally be people.
“You could immediately see there are opportunities that wildlife are missing out on because normally there would be people there – and with their absence we could see this is foraging ground, it’s not just a beach.
“And then the summer was incredibly busy… I think at one point we had six times the normal amount of visitors to Cornwall than we’d normally have the same time in previous years.
“But what was palpable, what you could really feel, was how much people needed that space, needed to get outside.
As the days shorten and the nation swaps sun drenched parks for centrally heated homes, Burke points out that exposure to nature, whether it’s a crisp walk or simply tuning into the show, might just provide the dose of positivity we’ve all been looking for.
“I think it would be naive not to acknowledge that this is going to be a tricky autumn and winter for all of us,” she reflects.
“Hopefully, being able to bring nature to our audience is going to give them that little respite from what has otherwise been a really challenging year.”
Autumnwatch returns to BBC 2 on Tuesday October 27.