My secret life: David Bellamy - Botanist

Friday 17 June 2011 19:00 EDT
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My parents were ... Thomas Bellamy and Winifred May Bellamy.

The house I grew up in ... 124 St Dunstans Hill, Cheam. We were quite high up and could see London in the distance. In the war, we could actually see it with a telescope, and we watched it burn.

When I was a child I wanted to ... be a ballet dancer. I tried to do it – I actually had some lessons – but my physique was quite large, so I knew I couldn't. But I wish I had.

If I could change one thing about myself ... I would make my beard grow much better so I would look like Charles Darwin. I was the second person ever to be on the cover of Nature, a top scientific publication, and the person who beat me to it was Darwin. The picture was of me chasing a girl in a grass skirt with a lawnmower – and the caption was 'Science is fun'. Wow: I really should have retired at that point.

You wouldn't know it but I am very good at... sleeping on moving vehicles.

You may not know it but I'm no good at ... talking on telephones. I don't own a mobile phone at all, I just can't hack them.

What I see when I look in the mirror ... A chameleon. Sometimes you think 'fantastic', sometimes you think 'I can't look that old!'.

My favourite item of clothing ... Shorts. I like short shorts. I have super knees.

It's not fashionable but I like ... my Speedos. All my children hate them, they try to hide them. They say I'm too old to wear them; I say just wait till you see me in them.

My house is ... very ancient, and sits in the middle of a wood by a lake. We used to try to grow all our vegetables but we had so many rabbits we gave up! Now we eat the rabbits.

My secret crush is ... Edith Piaf. I was brought up in a strict Baptist way and when I heard her sing I thought, 'There is another part of the world...'.

Movie heaven ... Disney's Fantasia. I've probably watched it 200 times, it made me understand the science of music. I still think that the toadstools dancing round are phenomenal.

A book that changed me ... A Girl of the Limberlost. It was all about growing up in America when all the trees started to be chopped down and the wonderful wetlands were drained. It made me who I am: I realised the world is a wonderful place but we do mess it up.

The last time I cried ... When I heard they re planning to put a very big road through the Serengeti in Africa. It mustn't happen – if I've got to, I'll be down there on a picket line.

What's the point? To enjoy life – and I still do.

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