He stood as a
Conservative candidate unsuccessfully in the
1945 general election in
Wembley North. In 1948, he founded the organisation with which he was ever afterwards closely associated, the Severn Wildfowl Trust (now the
Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust) with its headquarters at
Slimbridge in
Gloucestershire. In the years that followed, he led several ornithological expeditions worldwide, and became a television personality, popularising the study of
wildfowl and
wetlands. His BBC natural history series,
Look, ran from 1955 to 1981 and made him a household name. He wrote and illustrated several books on the subject, including his autobiography,
The Eye of the Wind (1961). In the 1950s, he also appeared regularly on
BBC radio's
Children's Hour, in the series, "
Nature Parliament".
He married
Elizabeth Jane Howard in 1942. A daughter, Nicola, was born a year later. They divorced in 1951 and he married an assistant, Philippa Talbot-Ponsonby, while on an expedition to
Iceland in search of the breeding grounds of the
Pink-footed Goose. A daughter, Dafila, was born later in the same year. (Dafila is the old
scientific name for a
pintail). She, too, is now an artist, painting birds
http://www.swla.co.uk/SWLAmembers/scottd/ScottD.htm.
Scott took up
gliding in 1956 and became a British champion in 1963. He was chairman of the
British Gliding Association (BGA) for two years from
1968 and was president of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Gliding Club. He was responsible for involving
Prince Philip in gliding; the Prince is still patron of the BGA.
Scott also continued with his love of sailing, skippering the
12 metre yacht Sovereign in the 1964 challenge for the
America's Cup which was held by
USA. Sovereign suffered a whitewash 4-0 defeat in a very one-sided competition where the American boat was seen to be the faster design.
From
1973 to
1983, Scott was
Chancellor of the
University of Birmingham. This was his final notable occupation, as he died six years later just before what would have been his 80th birthday.