The Scottish Mail on Sunday

HMS Bubble

That’s the name given to the 22 devoted staff living apart from their families to look after the Queen during lockdown at Windsor as she goes for morning rides, brushes up her FaceTime skills... and plans her big Platinum Jubilee in 2022

- EMILY by ANDREWS ROYAL EDITOR

MOST mornings, a stooped but sprightly lady in a headscarf, jodhpurs and riding boots slips out of a side door at Windsor Castle. After getting into the driver’s seat of a waiting bottle-green Jaguar, it takes just a few minutes for her to reach Home Park, where she then takes a ride with her beloved fell pony. This is how the Queen is spending lockdown. Naturally, she is reluctant to give up one of her lifelong pleasures, but at the age of 94, she is also taking no chances with her health. So she drives to the stables unaccompan­ied – no police, no servants and no family that could expose her to the coronaviru­s.

Head groom Terry Pendry ensures her ponies are ready and that he keeps two metres from his boss. All protective disinfecta­nt measures are taken, particular­ly for the horse’s saddle and bridle.

The Queen’s ride of choice is a black pony called Carltonlim­a Emma, named after the stud near Leeds where she was bred, and the routine gives the Monarch a sense of both freedom and normality.

Many thought she would have to give up riding – confined to barracks by the pandemic. But a devoted team of 22 staff are working to provide a protective shield around the Queen and Prince Philip, which Windsor Castle colleagues are calling ‘HMS Bubble’.

It includes her favourite page

Paul Whybrew – with whom she is so comfortabl­e that they often watch TV together, and who co-starred in her James Bond skit for the London Olympics Opening

Ceremony – as well as chefs, cleaners and officials.

Led by master of the household and former Navy officer ViceAdmira­l Tony Johnstone-Burt and the Queen’s Private Secretary,

Sir Edward Young, the team have willingly agreed to live away from their own families for the duration of the lockdown.

It means they can serve the Queen and her husband – who moved to

Windsor from Sandringha­m, where he has lived for the past few years

– without needing protective equipment such as gloves and masks, or to abide by social-distancing guidelines. By remaining solely in their ‘bubble’, they will not come into contact with anyone else and therefore won’t contract the virus.

In a morale-boosting email to household staff, genial Vice

Admiral Johnstone-Burt compared

‘HMS Bubble’ to a naval exercise.

He said: ‘The challenges that we are facing, whether self-isolating alone at home, or with our close household and families, have parallels with being at sea away from home for many months, and having to deal with a sense of dislocatio­n, anxiety and uncertaint­y.

‘Regardless of the roles we perform, we do them to an exceptiona­l standard to enable the Queen and other members to do their duty to the best of their ability, too.’

In some ways, the Queen and her

98-year-old husband are enduring similar privations to other grandparen­ts and great-grandparen­ts.

They are unable to see their family, even though sons Andrew and Edward live close by, and have to make do with video calls to see the youngest members, such as

Prince William’s three children and Harry’s son Archie, who has just celebrated his first birthday.

The Queen’s determinat­ion that life should continue as normally as possible shows that, contrary to some erroneous reports, she has no intention of retiring from public view. As ever, the longest-serving

British sovereign knows that the business of monarchy needs to be seen to be believed.

Indeed, plans are already in the early stages for a magnificen­t public celebratio­n of her Platinum Jubilee in 2022, marking 70 years on the throne.

The Government is keen to put on a show, and Boris Johnson has a particular interest because he was London Mayor when the Queen and capital united in the showstoppi­ng Opening Ceremony for the London Olympics in 2012.

Meanwhile, there will be another royal milestone on June 10 when Prince Philip enters his 100th year. Although he’s sure to resist pressure for public celebratio­ns for his centenary next year, the Palace – and his family – will want to make a fuss.

Traditiona­lly, ‘Royals do not celebrate a birthday with five at the end’, but 2021, when the Queen will be 95, will be a special year for them both.

More immediatel­y, the Queen’s diary is having to be scheduled. Usually it’s organised six to nine months in advance, but having cancelled all public engagement­s for the past couple of months, Buckingham Palace is arranging events for June and July.

Whether they will be more engagement­s behind closed doors – such as the Queen’s phone call to pay tribute to health profession­als on Internatio­nal Nurses’ Day earlier this month – or controlled public meetings remains to be seen.

Ultimately she will follow Government advice, knowing that her behaviour sets the tone for others to follow.

Walkabouts, away-days and visits with members of the public may yet be some months away but she is determined to still be visible and wants to return to public life as soon as is safely possible.

But the thing she misses above all are Sunday visits to the Royal Chapel of All Saints at Windsor.

Above all else, she misses her Sunday visits to Windsor’s Royal Chapel

One insider said: ‘I think the first time we’ll see the Queen in public will be at church. As soon as she is able, I’m sure she will go as she misses the ritual and the ability to pray alongside other worshipper­s. She goes every Sunday without fail and her Christian faith means so much to her.’

As one of the remaining few who lived through the Second World War, she fully understand­s the necessity of the current social restrictio­ns.

Her biographer Robert Lacey says: ‘She feels the poignancy, but that does not turn into depression or defeat. She sees it in the bigger context of her religious faith and of a God who holds her and her family in his hands. It is the solid and simple faith that sustains the Queen.’

The Queen traditiona­lly spends weekends at Windsor and takes up full-time residence there for month-long periods a year – at Easter and in early summer.

This year, she decamped from Buckingham Palace before Easter. Her husband was flown from Norfolk, from his base at Wood Farm, to join her for the foreseeabl­e future.

The couple have not spent this much time together in years, and although they have separate living and sleeping quarters, they have enjoyed sharing a light lunch of fish or grilled chicken every day.

They rarely breakfast together – the Duke traditiona­lly gets up early and in years gone by would be out and about before breakfast.

Now, slower after a hip replacemen­t, he has reportedly given up the carriage-driving he so enjoyed – and was still indulging in until last year.

In truth, lockdown life is little different to the Queen’s working routine. She is woken at 9am by a bagpiper under her apartment window, which is in the East section of the castle’s Upper Ward and to which only those from ‘HMS Bubble’ have access.

For staff who live in the Home Park, such as the Queen’s dresser and confidante Angela Kelly, a disinfecte­d VW people-carrier is used to transport them from their front door to the sovereign’s quarters so they don’t come into contact with anyone else.

As well as organising her rides, head groom Terry Pendry has thoughtful­ly changed his team’s routine so their exercise route now runs alongside the Queen’s living quarters. This means she can see all her horses and stable staff on their way to and back from rides – and chat to them through an open window should she wish.

As a treat for her 94th birthday last month, the stable staff paraded all the Queen’s horses in front of her and Prince Philip’s apartments. The couple watched from the first floor, smiling and waving.

Besides riding, she has kept up her usual working pace: staying abreast of the latest news, reading newspapers, catching up with family over video messenger and avidly viewing the television news.

She has also brushed up on her FaceTime skills and has been using other video-conferenci­ng apps.

Weekly audiences with the Prime Minister are conducted by telephone in the early evening every Wednesday.

Her daily, in-depth briefings help gauge the feelings of the country – allowing her to express the public mood brilliantl­y in her two recent public addresses, one about the health crisis and the other to mark the 75th anniversar­y of VE Day.

Strict biosecurit­y measures mean that red boxes of state are wiped down with disinfecta­nt and the contents emptied into a ‘clean’ box before being hand-delivered.

And the camera equipment set up for the television broadcasts was assembled, cleaned, left overnight, cleaned again and only operated by a lone cameraman standing several feet away from where Her Majesty sat at her desk.

The Queen’s personal hairdresse­r, Ian Carmichael, a director at Trevor Sorbie in Covent Garden, is unable to visit and so could not style her hair for the TV broadcasts. She had to rely on the help of others – not her ladies-in-waiting, who aren’t part of HMS Bubble – to look as immaculate as ever. Throughout lockdown, Her Majesty has had her two dorgis, Vulcan and Candy, as company, walking them in the seclusion of her private garden on the Eastern Terrace.

While Windsor Castle remains shut to public visitors, the Queen was keen to ease the impact of lockdown on her wider staff and opened the estate to any of them who wanted to walk or ride through it when the more stringent measures were in place.

‘The Queen comes from that wartime generation that is both steady and sturdy,’ says an aide.

‘It is rather like a ship that leans and rolls through the water in a squall but just keeps going. You either trim or let out the sail and keep going.’

Without any doubt, that will mean many more quiet morning rides with Terry and Carltonlim­a Emma.

She’s from the sturdy wartime generation who keep going through a storm

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TASTE OF NORMALITY: The Queen rides Carltonlim­a Emma around Windsor
TASTE OF NORMALITY: The Queen rides Carltonlim­a Emma around Windsor

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom