The Sunday Telegraph

Couple heads off for Easter holiday with their children

Waleses determined to shield George, Charlotte and Louis and allow them to enjoy their school holidays

- By Hannah Furness ROYAL EDITOR

THE Wales family are to retreat for more than three weeks to spend time out of the public eye, as their three young children are given space to continue their childhood in privacy.

The welfare of Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis has been at the heart of plans to disclose the Princess of Wales’s treatment for cancer, timed to fit in with their Easter holiday when they could “circle the wagons”.

The Prince and Princess took the decision for her to go public with the news after they broke up from school, reducing the risk of the children hearing other people talking about the condition of the mother of three, even in the most well meaning of ways.

Their father, the Prince of Wales, will be with them until the end of the holiday on April 17, with the family retreating to their home in Norfolk as usual at this time of year.

They will not be photograph­ed walking to church on Easter Sunday, with the Princess intending to make only the occasional public appearance – decided at the last minute based on her health – until advised by her medical team that she can return to work.

Prince George, 10, Princess Charlotte, eight, and five-year-old Prince Louis will continue their day-to-day lives out of the public eye, with as much routine as possible. The children, a source said, are their parents’ top “priority”.

The Princess, described by friends as the “lynchpin” of the Wales family, has already ensured the three children have understood and processed her illness as far as possible before it was made public.

She said in a video message, released on Friday: “Most importantl­y, it has taken us time to explain everything to George, Charlotte and Louis in a way that is appropriat­e for them, and to reassure them that I am going to be OK.”

It follows the Princess’s decade-long approach to parenting, cemented by her research in her chosen field of early years developmen­t. She has focused particular­ly on social and emotional developmen­t, teaching children to understand and express emotions in a healthy way.

The Prince and Princess place great emphasis on spending time outdoors in the fresh air, playing in the woods and in the mud, as well as doing sports from ballet to football, rugby and cricket.

“Their kids bring them a lot of joy,” Gary Goldsmith, the Princess’s uncle said in a magazine interview this weekend.

Earlier this month, the Prince spoke out about the scourge of too much screen time, urging children and adults alike to put their phones down during a visit to a youth club. “They are fantastic parents,” said a source. “It can’t be overstated. Everything they do is about their children.”

Another source has previously called the Prince and Princess the “best parents in royal history”, as a result of their con

‘They are fantastic parents. It can’t be overstated. Everything they do is about their children’

scious and deliberate efforts to make decisions to suit their children rather than sticking rigidly to duty and tradition.

“The Prince and Princess of Wales have made a clear decision about how they’re going to parent their children,” said one.

“They are committed to giving the children the happiest and healthiest upbringing possible, setting the foundation for the rest of their lives.

“It’s not something that’s instead of their commitment to duty, it IS their commitment to duty: bringing up the next generation and future King.”

One friend said the couple aims to give the next generation of royal children the stable home life the young Prince William, whose parents separated in 1992, “didn’t have”.

The Princess has spent more than a decade working with experts in the sector of early childhood developmen­t, and has regularly spoken of the importance of the foundation years of zero to five as the most important in a person’s life.

Speaking in 2017, she said: “We hope to encourage [our children] to speak about their feelings.”

She added: “I’ve got such fond memories of being in the garden and being outside from my own childhood, and I’m sharing that with my own children at the moment.”

Last year, she revealed that Prince Louis’ class used a “feelings wheel” made up of colours to help them express their emotions, praising it as “really good”.

The Prince and Princess both do the school run every day between them, and have in recent years restricted their overseas tours to short trips in part so they are not away from the children for too long.

“The kids are everything to them, and she is the lynchpin of the family,” a source said, adding that the Princess would be being “stoic” about her illness.

The Princess is understood to be keen to continue her usual routines as far as possible during her treatment. The family do a range of sports, with the mother of three enjoying cold water swimming and the children doing everything from triathlons to ballet lessons.

“What I think is really interestin­g is that they are all obviously very different temperamen­ts,” the Princess said during an appearance on Mike Tindall’s podcast The Good, The Bad & The Rugby in 2023, adding that “they are growing and trying out different sports”.

“They’re obviously still really young. It’s going to be interestin­g to see how that grows and develops.”

The King and the Princess enjoyed a private heart to heart over lunch at Windsor Castle on Thursday – the day after she recorded her video message revealing she was undergoing cancer treatment.

The pair are said to have discussed their respective diagnoses and offered each other warm support, leaving the King feeling “emotional”.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment.

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