The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wellies ahoy as NZ quake leaves Harry and Meghan unshaken

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AUCKLAND: Prince Harry and wife Meghan competed at “welly wanging” and were gifted a toy kiwi on Tuesday, but narrowly missed out on the ultimate New Zealand experience when a powerful earthquake rattled parts of the country they had left just the previous day.

The “Shaky Isles” lived up to their name as the royal roadshow moved to Auckland from Wellington, where the national parliament was temporaril­y suspended when a deep 6.2magnitude tremor hit the central North Island.

Reporters travelling with Harry and Meghan said they did not feel the mid-afternoon quake and the royals proceeded as planned with a walkabout on the Auckland waterfront.

Members of the public were keen to give pregnant Meghan presents for her baby, which is due early next year, with gifts including a plush kiwi toy and an All Blacks onesie.

Accompanie­d by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, they smiled and posed for selfies with members of the crowd, despite rainy weather.

Unexpected talent

Earlier, Meghan displayed an unexpected talent for “welly wanging”, gaining bragging rights over Harry after they competed in the oddball New Zealand sport.

When she married into Britain’s Royal Family in London five months ago, it’s doubtful Meghan envisaged her duties would include standing in a rain-soaked paddock half a world away, hurling a wellington boot into the distance.

But as schoolchil­dren on her team chanted “Meghan, Meghan, Meghan”, the pregnant duchess gave a flick of the wrist and sent her red-and-white polka dot welly sailing past Harry’s best effort.

Clutching her prize, a miniature mounted wellington boot, the American-born former actress told her team: “You should put it in your school. Now that’ll make a show and tell!”

Pinehill School pupil Isabella Iti said there was a friendly rivalry between the couple as they lined up for the big event.

“I think she was thinking that there was no chance that she would win. But she did,” she said.

Wellington throwing is one of the unusual activities seen at rural fairs and fundraiser­s in New Zealand, along with wood chopping, olive-pit spitting and speed tree-climbing.

Despite her impressive performanc­e, Meghan would need to train hard to match former Commonweal­th decathlete Brent Newdick, who once reportedly threw his welly 48.5 metres (160 feet) only to be disqualifi­ed because he was not a local.

The royals also helped plant native trees as part of an environmen­tal project and visited a charity called Pillars, which provides support to the children of prisoners.

Harry said the charity was a way to “children can have stability in times of turmoil”.

The couple are in the final days of a packed 16-day tour that has included more than 70 engagement­s in Australia, Fiji, Tonga and New Zealand. — AFP

 ??  ?? Harry and Meghan (left), display gifts presented to them during a visit to Pillars, a charity operating across New Zealand that supports children who have a parent in prison by providing special mentoring schemes, at Manukau City in Auckland on Tuesday. (Below) The royal couple arrive at Pillars. (Bottom left) Prince Harry watches a ‘wero’, a ceremonial challenge and an ancient Maori warrior tradition to determine whether visitors came in peace or with hostile intent, at the Tamatekapu­a meeting house onTe Papaiouru marae in Rotorua, yesterday, while Meghan (far left) watches; (Top right) Harry and Meghan, attend a reception hosted by New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern (right) at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in Auckland on Tuesday. — AFP photos
Harry and Meghan (left), display gifts presented to them during a visit to Pillars, a charity operating across New Zealand that supports children who have a parent in prison by providing special mentoring schemes, at Manukau City in Auckland on Tuesday. (Below) The royal couple arrive at Pillars. (Bottom left) Prince Harry watches a ‘wero’, a ceremonial challenge and an ancient Maori warrior tradition to determine whether visitors came in peace or with hostile intent, at the Tamatekapu­a meeting house onTe Papaiouru marae in Rotorua, yesterday, while Meghan (far left) watches; (Top right) Harry and Meghan, attend a reception hosted by New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern (right) at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in Auckland on Tuesday. — AFP photos

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