Daily Mail

Don’t kill Sir David!

BBC scraps plan to film presenter, 96, with chicks...to shield him from bird flu

- By Xantha Leatham Deputy Science Editor

HE has based his television career on getting close to nature. And Sir David Attenborou­gh was hoping his latest series would give him the chance to interact with fledgling seabirds.

But his plans were scuppered after experts warned the chicks could have bird flu – and catching it would probably be fatal for the 96-year-old broadcaste­r.

For his first-ever series about wildlife and plants in the British Isles, Sir David was to be filmed as Manx shearwater chicks left their undergroun­d burrows on Skomer Island, off Pembrokesh­ire in west Wales, to begin a 6,000-mile migration. Producers hoped the chicks would climb up his arm and take off from his head.

But executive producer Alastair Fothergill scrapped the plan when, two weeks before filming, reports emerged of avian flu on neighbouri­ng Grassholm Island.

So instead, two infrared cameras were used – one facing Sir David and the other trained on a boulder a few feet away where the chicks would take flight – still creating a special TV moment. Sir David also filmed puffins on the island.

The five-part series Wild Isles, which was shot over three years, begins on BBC1 at pm on Sunday with an episode that also features killer whales, white-tailed eagles and dormice.

Sir David said: ‘I’ve been lucky enough to travel to almost every part the globe and gaze upon some of its most beautiful and dramatic sights. But I can assure you that nature in these islands, if you know where to look, can be just as dramatic and spectacula­r as anything I’ve seen elsewhere.’

 ?? ?? Clifftop perch: Sir David on Skomer. Above: A Manx shearwater chick handled by a warden ‘Oh look, it’s the first cuckoo of spring’
Clifftop perch: Sir David on Skomer. Above: A Manx shearwater chick handled by a warden ‘Oh look, it’s the first cuckoo of spring’

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