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TRAGIC NEWS: Queen Camilla’s Secret Plot To Take The Crown EXPOSED As She Tries To Poison The…

TRAGIC NEWS: Queen Camilla’s Secret Plot To Take The Crown EXPOSED As She Tries To Poison King Charles

Queen Camilla’s Former Assistant Reveals Her Biggest Fear When Traveling Abroad. Queen Camilla’s has a major fear every time she and King Charles travel. Here’s what that is.

As King Charles and Queen Camilla (formerly Camilla Parker Bowles) visit to Canada wraps up, one of the couple’s former employees is sharing something the monarch’s wife fears every time they travel but many don’t know about it. Here’s what that is, plus just how much planning goes into royal visits even one as brief as the pair’s two-day Canada trip. Grant Harrold was King Charles’ butler for seven years. During his time working for the now-monarch, Harrold also looked after Camilla.

His duties included that of valet, housekeeper, house manager, and driver. The former royal employee discussed what went into planning trips abroad for the royals and Camilla’s biggest travel fear. Speaking on behalf of Slingo, Harrold shared with Showbiz Cheat Sheet that Camilla actually has a fear of flying.
“When the royals fly, there are no security checks, no scanners, and no limited luggage,” he explained. “They’ll be in a VIP lounge you’d sit there and have tea, coffee, and biscuits.

When you walk out to board, your bags are taken from you, and you walk straight onto the plane without a ticket. “When you’re on the jet, you’ll be given a menu and can choose what meal you want. It’s a jet, which means you get to experience luxury, and it’s a nice way to travel. But the downside of these jets, when I would be on them, is they were obviously small and very prone to turbulence.”

Harrold revealed: “Camilla is definitely not a fan of flying. While she has to travel all over the world, flying was never her favourite mode of transport. I don’t think it’s to do with the heights it’s more the turbulence. But even though she has this fear, she deals with it when she does have to travel.”

Harrold also talked about just how long royal trips and visits abroad actually take to plan out.

“There are normally months of planning,”he said. “The planning is done by the office, and then, behind the scenes, you’ve got the butlers and the valets who are in charge of the day-to-day stuff. When Charles travels, he’s got to have the certain things he likes in his diet, or his meals that will be sent over that you can’t get in the US or Canada.”

Harrold added: “The king has valets who do his packing I used to do valeting as well. They’ll be the ones that are in charge of making sure his clothes are all sorted and he’s got what he needs. There will be day suits, military uniforms, his medals, or possibly swords, depending on where he’s going. The plan is extraordinary. “The butlers will be sorting out his personal side the kind of correspondence he’s got to deal with when he’s away from that point.

Then you’ve got the security side that all has to be put together as well. That’s why these take months to plan, not weeks.” Queen Camilla joins Princess Charlotte’s godfather at special unveiling. The Queen has unveiled the Foundation Stone for the new King Charles III Sacristy at Westminster Abbey, joking that the last time she visited the construction site, there had been “quite a lot of skeletons”. 

Joining the Duke of Buccleuch in removing a red cloth from the engraving, she told guests attending a ceremony to mark the occasion: “I just want to say how delighted I am to unveil this foundation stone. I can’t believe that last time I visited here that there is now a floor, last time I came, there were quite a lot of skeletons. Queen Camilla issued warning ahead of critical trip with King Charles. The Queen is embarking on a major royal tour next week and an expert has issued a warning. Queen Camilla was issued a warning ahead of her major tour in Italy with King Charles next month.

The Queen toured the property at 48 Doughty Street, which served as Dickens’ London home from 1837 to 1839. The visit celebrated the centenary of the museum, which was saved from demolition and renovated by The Dickens Fellowship before opening in 1925. The Queen viewed some of the museum’s original material relating to Dickens’ work and wider collection.

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