My point of view - Chris Packham's centenary visit to Norfolk

My point of view - Chris Packham's centenary visit to Norfolk

Chris Packham being interviewed by young people at NWT centenary event, April 2026, credit Phil Barnes

Our young blogger Oscar tells all about his exciting experience interviewing Chris Packham at Norfolk Wildlife Trust's centenary event.

On 22 April 2026, I was given the opportunity of a lifetime.

Back in January, I had taken a chance glance at an advert for a Norfolk Wildlife Trust event: Chris Packham, naturalist and campaigner extraordinaire, was visiting Norfolk to celebrate the charity’s 100th anniversary. This immediately had me on tenterhooks - I had watched Chris for years on Springwatch, but the idea of seeing him in person, live, was an unmissable opportunity. After looking into it further on socials, I found that there was a youth panel of 16–25-year-olds interviewing him. Though I completely understood that the added maturity of being over 16 would be necessary to appear in front of so many people, I still felt a despondence that I was too young. Nevertheless, it would be a privilege to see him in person, and I resolved to get tickets anyway.

A couple of weeks later I received an email and, on opening it, was immediately flooded with a multitude of feelings. I had been invited to apply to interview Chris on stage in front of 750 people, despite my age. My first thought was: that is way too many people to talk in front of! But my second thought was: that's too big an opportunity to miss. And that second thought, after an internal battle that lasted some hours, dominated.

A man wearing a yellow coat and red puffa jacket leads a line of young people in a walk through woodland on a sunny day

Chris Packham at NWT centenary event, walking with young people, April 2026, credit Phil Barnes

Fast forward another couple of weeks, and I had been accepted. After a shaky couple of minutes, I headed off to my first mentoring session with Nick Acheson, another fantastic naturalist whom I already knew from our shared passion for geese. I also met the other two young people I would be on stage with, who would become far more than just 'colleagues' to me. Throughout the course of these meetings, I learnt that everything I feared about public speaking was just in my head. I went from stumbling over my words and fearing speaking to even three people at once, to being comfortable speaking to over 500 people, and for that, I have Nick, Sára and Alex to thank. At each session, we would ease ourselves in with some rather corny staged interviews and, despite the occasional humiliating stutter or voice crack, I learnt that public speaking wasn't half as bad as my warped preconceptions had convinced me. To walk this journey with such lovely people as Scarlett and Toby, and seeing my own unfounded fears reflected in them, made me feel reassured that I wasn't alone. I was privileged to see them grow hugely in self-assuredness and as people too.

A few hours before the 'real thing', I was seriously panicking. No amount of immersion therapy (although it was very effective!) could fully prepare me for the evening I had ahead of me, and such a new environment left me feeling like a fish out of water. But now was the time for ITV and BBC interviews - the waves precursor to the later tsunami, in public speaking terms at least. However, I knew how I really felt about nature, and that assurance allowed me to speak freely about what I truly love: conservation. I walked away happy about what I'd said.

With this done, it was time for our walk with Chris. When he arrived, the encounter seemed very different from my previous experience of seeing him on TV: suddenly he wasn't an image from a camera hundreds of miles away, but an interactive part of my life. As our group wandered through the UEA campus, Chris kindly took the time to explain the subtle nuances of the environment around us. Where many would see just a forest floor, Chris sees an entire ecosystem, interacting and decaying to make new soil to support the next resurgence of life.

A group of people standing in a group in woodland on a sunny day, looking around and chatting

Chris Packham leading a walk at NWT centenary event, April 2026, credit Phil Barnes

I was awash with surprise about the site's incredible biodiversity - from the depths of the wood to the shores of the lake, nature abounded. Basking in chlorophyll-pumped glades were peacocks, their velvet-purple cloaks glowing softly in the evening sun. Orange-tips darted through the verdant rides as tangerine flashes, propelled by hurried wing-flicks. The spring hawthorns began to cover their harsh winter barbs with delicate 5-faced lilac blooms. All of us were captivated by the gloriously wild spring day - so much so that we almost had to be dragged away! After we sauntered back, I went to prepare for my imminent time on stage.

For the first half of the event I was watching off-stage, so I sat down and told myself to relax. Although a little tense, I was excited to hear what Chris and Patrick had to say. Before I knew it, Patrick was introducing himself and we were away! On came a series of poignant questions about conservation, with some equally poignant answers: from beavers to pet kestrels, the interview covered a considerable amount of ground. Above all, I was shocked by the pair's comfortable nature on stage - Patrick's seamless inquisition, without so much as a peek at a script, was complemented beautifully by Chris's intellectual flow of knowledge. The 90 minutes seemed to fly by (the antithesis of a football game) and I felt I had amassed only a tiny fraction of Chris's experiences of the natural world. But it gave the audience a delicious taster of what life as a 24-hour naturalist could look like, and that enticed me greatly.

During the interval, my two peers and I went to our 'safety room' to decompress. The minutes were trickling away quickly and I was desperate to burn off some energy, so I began to sprint around the lecture hall. Though completely discarding my dignity, I knew this would puncture my anxiety, and it was soon time to head back.

As Patrick made his introductions, we shuffled nervously to our seats and I again told myself to relax while I repeatedly scanned my notes. But, when the lights dimmed and the curtain rose, so did my fears to an extent. I felt oddly released now that I was in the moment - this scarily consequential event that had been looming for months was much less terrifying now I could look it dead in the eye. I strolled onto stage feeling far more confident, and this was boosted by such an attentive and smiley audience.

A line of people on stage conducting an interview. The person on the far left is dressed as a badger, while the young adult on the far right speaks into a microphone

Chris Packham being interviewed at NWT centenary event by a panel of young people, April 2026, credit Naomi Palmer

My first question was about how wildlife crime can be dealt with: by education or strict law? Chris answered from the heart, as I expected, with his own experience. He explained that it depends where you are in the world, using his campaign against raptor assassination in Cyprus as a case in point. In Britain, policies on wildlife crime are moving in largely the right direction, so perhaps a more educational response may work here, in my opinion. But in other places, where policies can be more lax and conservation isn't such a high priority, enforcement may be a necessary first step. I couldn't help but think about how brave he and Megan (McCubbin, Chris’s stepdaughter) were to confront raptor hunters face-to-face - that is a different kind of commitment.

My second question inquired into how I can persuade my friends to care about nature as much as I do. We joked that I shouldn't judge my friends and that I was too harsh initially! Chris had clearly given this a great deal of thought in the past, and explained that we only need to bring 25% of people over to our way of thinking to change the world. And when I thought about it like that, stopping the biodiversity and climate crises seemed far more achievable.

Perhaps the most memorable moment of the interview came when we were reading out audience questions. I looked down at the paper in my hand and struggled to read out its contents without cracking up! But there, in front of everyone, I read, "I hear you collect chairs!" The subsequent punchline of "Why?" made cause for raucous laughter throughout the lecture hall. This brought to mind the primary school teaching that there is no such thing as a silly question, and an inquisition into chair collection solidified this heart-warming sentiment for me.

A panel of five people, including three young people, conducting an interview on stage.

Chris Packham being interviewed at NWT centenary event, April 2026, credit Phil Barnes

As I walked offstage, I was on an absolute high. But feelings of closure ate away at my stomach like altica beetles on willowherb. The realisation that everything would be normal again after this was saddening, but I knew it wouldn't be for long. Because as I said in my stage introduction, the career I saw for myself was filled with more opportunities to pour myself into a love of nature and tonight would be just the beginning.

Discover more of our centenary events here.