Written by Joan Payne from the Radnorshire Wildlife Trust:
"Well-known television wildlife presenter and cameraman Dee Doody delighted the audience at the annual Radnorshire Wildlife Trust Barnes Lecture with his stories about Mid Wales' magnificent birds of prey.
For example, red kites may look ferocious. In reality, says Dee, they are great big wusses. If you handle one, the worst it will do is to dribble on you.
In contrast, even the chicks of the goshawk are so vicious that they spend most of the day standing on the rim of their nest looking outwards. If they turn round and catch sight of each other, they will tear each other to bits.
An audience of over a hundred crowded into the ballroom of the Metropole Hotel in Llandrindod Wells on October 27th to enjoy Dee's superb photography and intimate knowledge of raptors.
Dee is familiar as a regular presenter of wildlife programmes on ITV. Many enjoyed his recent series 'Wild About Wales'.
He was born in Zimbabwe (then known as Southern Rhodesia) and spent his early years in Africa's vast spaces. He came to Britain in the 1960s and settled in Mid Wales in 1980.
However he nearly didn't make it to the lecture. Two weeks previously, he told his audience, he had been within three minutes of death.
He had severe food poisoning after eating honey-roast peanuts that were well past their sell-by date and had grown toxic bacteria. He suffered a total physical collapse and realised how close to death he was when he heard the ambulance man say, 'I think we're going to lose him'.
Also present at the lecture was Tony Cross, head of the Red Kite Trust. He told the audience that the British population of red kites is the only population in Europe that is growing.
Red kite numbers in Germany are falling particularly fast. This is because of the industrialisation of agriculture in the former East Germany following re-unification.
Dee Doody said that DNA tests showed that all red kites in Mid Wales traced their descent from a single female. No other British bird has been so close to extinction and survived.
This high level of in-breeding meant that in the early years of the project to re-establish the red kite population in Mid Wales, pairs often failed to raise their broods. Now, however, more genetic variation has entered the population and breeding is more successful.
In thanking Dee for his talk, Radnorshire Wildlife Trust conservation manager Julian Jones told the audience how lucky we were to have people like Dee Doody living in Mid Wales."
Written by Joan Payne from the Radnorshire Wildlife Trust
your comments
Dave & Jill Cox Newtown
Hi, Dee
Glad to here all is well with you, and that you are fit and well again.. love your T.V programs and trust you will be on our screens again soon.
Lewis, London
Hi Dee,
In 2001 I worked as a Woodland Officer for Woodland Trust, when you spent a day filming in Park Wood.
I just wanted to say that the experience stuck with me - I'm glad to see you doing so well.
All the best.
Paul Prior, Toronto, Canada
Hey, Dee, looking pretty good for someone just out of a near-death experience!! SO, you're a TV star nowadays, eh! Suppose it was bound to happen. Give my regards to the birds!
Mr Timothy Meredith
I found this lecture extremly interesting. Dee is a good friend of mine and is a very good cameraman and artist.
Add your comments to this page here: