Springwatch presenter Michaela Strachan has revealed a second cancer scare, 12 years after her devastating breast cancer battle.
The BBC wildlife expert, 59, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2014 after competing in ITVâs diving show Splash!
Michaela received the diagnosis following a routine mammogram in Cape Town and eventually underwent a double mastectomy as part of her treatment.
But the presenter said this week that she had a second health scare after eagle-eyed viewers spotted a lump on her throat while she was live on air.
âI did have a second scare, which was extraordinary, because I was doing Springwatch and I had a few people after the show message me and say, did you know youâve got a lump on your throat?â Michaela said on the How to Be 60 with Kaye Adams podcast.
âI was like, âhave I?â I was watching the show back in bed â because Iâm slightly geeky like that, Iâve always watched the live show back â and I thought, âoh my god, I do â Iâve got a lumpâ.â

Springwatch presenter Michaela Strachan has revealed a second cancer scare after her devastating breast cancer battle (Seen in 2017)

Appearing on the How to Be 60 with Kaye Adams podcast, Michaela said this week that she had a second health scare after eagle-eyed viewers spotted a lump on her throat
Michaela, who has presented BBC Twoâs Springwatch with Chris Packham since 2011, added: âIt was like an Adamâs apple at the side of my throat that was moving up and down as I spoke.â
She continued: âI mentioned it to the production team. I said, âI donât expect thereâs any chance of seeing a doctor?â We were up in the Cairngorms [in Scotland] at the time.
âThey managed to get a doctor in and I explained that Iâd had breast cancer. They said, âWith that history, we need to get you seenâ.â
The discovery led to an urgent blood test at a local hospital and a weekend appointment with a throat cancer specialist in Harley Street.
But what made the situation particularly distressing was that she felt she couldnât talk about it beyond her closest circle as the scare happened in 2019 when fellow TV presenter Nicki Chapman, 59, had just been diagnosed with a brain tumour.
âEveryone was talking about Nicki,â she said. âI canât say, âby the way, I just found a lump on my throat, it could be cancer!â So the whole thing was just awful.â
The star, who lives in South Africa with her film director partner Nick Chevallier â the father of her son Oliver, 20 â faced her fears head-on during the specialist appointment.
She recalled: âI said, âgive me the worst case scenarioâ and he said, âI donât want to do thatâ. I said, âWell, Iâm asking you. Could it be cancer?â

The BBC wildlife expert, 59, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2014 after competing in ITVâs diving show Splash!

Michaela, who has presented BBC Twoâs Springwatch with Chris Packham since 2011, added: âIt was like an Adamâs apple at the side of my throatâ (Seen with co-presenter Chris)
âHe said, âIt could be, but it would be highly unlikely. Iâve never heard of secondary breast cancer in your throat. It could be throat cancer â it could be completely separateâ. I said, âthen what?â He said, âthen weâd remove itâ, and I said, âif you remove it, could I use my voice? Could it affect my vocal cords?â
âHe said, âyes it couldâ. I said, âokay, best case scenario?â. âBest case scenario itâs just a benign cystâ. âMight you have to remove it?â âYesâ. âIf you remove it, could it affect my vocal cords?â âYesâ.
âIâm thinking, oh great, none of this is sounding good. None of it. Then I go back to do Springwatch on the Monday. So that was horrible, really horrible.â
Fortunately, tests revealed the lump was indeed a benign cyst which doctors were able to drain without any complications, and Michaela has since recovered.
âI still donât quite understand what it means,â she admitted on the podcast. âThatâs the one thatâs slightly more likely to spread to the other breasts.â
She added that doctors had given her the choice of having one or both breasts removed, but after consulting a friend whoâd had the same type of cancer, she opted for a double mastectomy.
âShe said to me, âget them both offâ,â Michaela recalled. âShe said, âyou donât want to be looking at that other one and always wondering whether itâs going to come back into that breastâ.â
Her friend also warned her about the psychological impact, telling her: âIf you have the double, theyâre just then the same and you donât end up looking at the one still there thinking, I wish I still had my normal boob on the other side.â
The diagnosis was particularly devastating for her partner Nick, whose previous wife died of colon cancer, leaving him to raise three children who had lost their mother.
âTo go back to your partner and say Iâve just been diagnosed with breast cancer, when he lost his previous wife to cancer, is an incredibly tough thing to do,â Michaela said.
âEveryone around me was like, âoh my god, how is Nick handling this?â,â she explained. âSo because of that, I became the stoic one. I was like, âright, letâs just get through itâ.â
Michaela later realised she needed to properly process the trauma and underwent trauma therapy release (TRE), which involves exercises that make the body shake uncontrollably to release trauma. âI cried the first time I did it, and suddenly Iâm sobbing,â she said. âThat was getting the trauma out.â
Now approaching her 60th birthday in April, Michaela said the experience of surviving cancer has changed her perspective on life.
âI think when youâve had the big C scare, which so many people have had, it does make you feel like every yearâs a bonus,â she reflected.
âI think, great, letâs just make the most of it because who knows whatâs going to happen next.â




