Scottish weather presenter Carol Kirkwood has bid an emotional farewell to the BBC, joining hosts Jon Kay and Sally Nugent on the BBC Breakfast sofa to break the news to viewers after more than 25 years at the corporation.
She hugged her co-presenters saying it was “really hard for me to say this because I love my job”.
Kirkwood, who joined the BBC in 1998, will leave in April and said it had been an “absolute privilege” to bring viewers the weather every day. After her regular morning forecast, the 63-year-old joined her co-hosts on the sofa, saying she was looking forward to spending more time with her husband and going travelling.
Kirkwood told Kay and Nugent: “I didn’t want to get emotional, but you two are my friends, and I love you dearly. [But] I want to spend more time with my gorgeous husband Steve. We only got married a couple of years ago and we’re ships that pass in the night, so I’m really looking forward to doing that. We want to travel as well.
She added: “I’ve loved my job, I’ve loved working at the BBC, but I love my husband more than my job.”
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Asked about an end to early-morning starts, she joked: “Alarm clocks will be a thing of the past.”
Kirkwood worked at The Weather Channel, the Met Office and the BBC, before joining the BBC Weather Centre in April 1998. She began broadcasting on the BBC News channel, and went on to appear regularly on BBC One. She has been the main weather presenter on BBC Breakfast since 2010.
As well as fronting the daily bulletins, Kirkwood often presented the weather on location, including from Wimbledon, the Chelsea Flower Show and royal events. She has also reported for The One Show and appeared as a contestant on Strictly Come Dancing in 2015, reaching week eight with her partner Pasha Kovalev.
Kirkwood was repeatedly being named best TV weather presenter at the TV and Radio Industries Club (TRIC) Awards, among several other industry plaudits.
She concluded: “My job is something I’ve never taken for granted and I’ve loved every minute. To those watching and listening at home – thank you for all the kindness you have shown me over the years, being part of your mornings has been a joy.”
Jonathan Munro, the interim CEO of BBC News, paid tribute to the long-serving weather hound: “From major national moments to the everyday forecasts that are such an important part of our audiences’ lives, she has set the gold standard for our accurate, valued journalism – always delivered with an appropriately sunny outlook,” he said. “She will be greatly missed by teams across the BBC. We wish her all the best for the future.”
Image: Neil Tilbrook/Creative Commons