Prince Charles and Prince George.Photo: Frank Augstein/Getty Images; Karwai Tang/WireImagePrince Charlescame face to long face with Prince George on a day out in West Wales on Thursday — though this George wasn’t the third in line to the throne, but instead a handsome shire horse who shares a name withCharles’s 7-year-old grandson.The Prince of Wales didn’t appear to pick up on the connection when he was told the name, but the farmer prince was clearly happy to meet his grandson’s namesake.“It’s so wonderful of you. Thank you so much for bringing him,” he told owner John Fletcher, from Gentle Giants of Moylgrove.The 5-year-old horse, which pulls old carriages for weddings and funerals and plows fields, still has some growing to do despite weighing one ton, Charles was told.The prince was also intrigued about whether the farm had any stallions and was informed that the farm’s mares go to a stud in North Wales. “That must be very exciting,” Charles said with a chuckle.Can’t get enough ofPEOPLE’s Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates onKate Middleton,Meghan Markleand more!Charles was visiting the tiny hamlet of Nevern, Pembrokeshire, to hear about the restoration of the local St. Brynach’s church bells, which pealed for the first time in 120 years. Inside, he tried his hand at ringing three of the Ellacombe bells, including one named for author Agatha Christie, whose grandson Mathew Prichard helped with donations for the $702,000 (£510,000) restoration fund.It was part of a day visiting churches around Pembrokeshire as the centenary of the Church in Wales was marked. He begun the day at the western tip of South Wales, for a service at the magnificent St. David’s Cathedral in the smallest city in the U.K.
Prince Charles and Prince George.Photo: Frank Augstein/Getty Images; Karwai Tang/WireImage

Prince Charlescame face to long face with Prince George on a day out in West Wales on Thursday — though this George wasn’t the third in line to the throne, but instead a handsome shire horse who shares a name withCharles’s 7-year-old grandson.The Prince of Wales didn’t appear to pick up on the connection when he was told the name, but the farmer prince was clearly happy to meet his grandson’s namesake.“It’s so wonderful of you. Thank you so much for bringing him,” he told owner John Fletcher, from Gentle Giants of Moylgrove.The 5-year-old horse, which pulls old carriages for weddings and funerals and plows fields, still has some growing to do despite weighing one ton, Charles was told.The prince was also intrigued about whether the farm had any stallions and was informed that the farm’s mares go to a stud in North Wales. “That must be very exciting,” Charles said with a chuckle.Can’t get enough ofPEOPLE’s Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates onKate Middleton,Meghan Markleand more!Charles was visiting the tiny hamlet of Nevern, Pembrokeshire, to hear about the restoration of the local St. Brynach’s church bells, which pealed for the first time in 120 years. Inside, he tried his hand at ringing three of the Ellacombe bells, including one named for author Agatha Christie, whose grandson Mathew Prichard helped with donations for the $702,000 (£510,000) restoration fund.It was part of a day visiting churches around Pembrokeshire as the centenary of the Church in Wales was marked. He begun the day at the western tip of South Wales, for a service at the magnificent St. David’s Cathedral in the smallest city in the U.K.
Prince Charlescame face to long face with Prince George on a day out in West Wales on Thursday — though this George wasn’t the third in line to the throne, but instead a handsome shire horse who shares a name withCharles’s 7-year-old grandson.
The Prince of Wales didn’t appear to pick up on the connection when he was told the name, but the farmer prince was clearly happy to meet his grandson’s namesake.
“It’s so wonderful of you. Thank you so much for bringing him,” he told owner John Fletcher, from Gentle Giants of Moylgrove.
The 5-year-old horse, which pulls old carriages for weddings and funerals and plows fields, still has some growing to do despite weighing one ton, Charles was told.
The prince was also intrigued about whether the farm had any stallions and was informed that the farm’s mares go to a stud in North Wales. “That must be very exciting,” Charles said with a chuckle.
Can’t get enough ofPEOPLE’s Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates onKate Middleton,Meghan Markleand more!
Charles was visiting the tiny hamlet of Nevern, Pembrokeshire, to hear about the restoration of the local St. Brynach’s church bells, which pealed for the first time in 120 years. Inside, he tried his hand at ringing three of the Ellacombe bells, including one named for author Agatha Christie, whose grandson Mathew Prichard helped with donations for the $702,000 (£510,000) restoration fund.
It was part of a day visiting churches around Pembrokeshire as the centenary of the Church in Wales was marked. He begun the day at the western tip of South Wales, for a service at the magnificent St. David’s Cathedral in the smallest city in the U.K.
source: people.com