Advertisement

Prince Charles, Camilla arrive in Canada

WATCH ABOVE: The prince of Wales and the duchess of Cornwall kick off a three province tour. Most of the attention is often on Will and Kate but as Ross Lord reports, Camilla and Charles will still generate some buzz (May 17.).

HALIFAX – Prince Charles his wife Camilla have arrived in Halifax for the first leg of their four-day tour.

Their arrival kicks off a whirlwind, four-day trip that includes stops in Pictou, N.S., the P.E.I. communities of Charlottetown, Bonshaw and Cornwall, as well as Winnipeg.

An official welcome ceremony will be held on Monday outside Halifax’s city hall, where Charles will make the first of four speeches planned for the tour.

Though the nation that has welcomed four official visits by the Royal Family in four years — Queen Elizabeth II in 2010, then-newlyweds Prince William and Kate in 2011, and Charles and Camilla in 2012 — the Canadian secretary to the Queen says there’s a fascination with the royals that can’t be satiated.

Story continues below advertisement

READ MORE: Where will Charles and Camilla be stopping on their Royal Tour?

“There’s a great deal of excitement and expectation about this royal tour,” says Kevin MacLeod, who’s worked on about 20 royal tours since 1987.

Charles and Camilla will be met by dignitaries when they touch down at Halifax Stanfield International Airport at around 6:30 p.m. It will be the heir to the throne’s first visit to the province since 1983 and the first for the Duchess of Cornwall.

RAW VIDEO: Prince Charles and Camilla arrive in Halifax

They will then retire to Government House in downtown Halifax where they will meet with Lt.-Gov. J.J. Grant and attend a reception with local, national and international journalists who are expected to shadow the couple’s every move until their departure Wednesday from Canada.

Story continues below advertisement

Their official welcome to Canada, where Charles will make his first of four planned speeches, will take place Monday morning near the cenotaph outside Halifax City Hall. Later at the city’s Public Gardens, Charles will plant an English oak tree — a tradition started 75 years ago by his grandfather, King George VI.

WATCH: Nicole McInnis drops by to show off some of her new fascinators just in time for the royal visit this weekend.

READ MORE: Royal tour in Maritimes, Winnipeg honours past but looks to future

At historic Pier 21 and the Canadian Museum of Immigration, the couple will meet with war brides and veterans of the Second World War. They will also travel to the community of Pictou where they will learn about the province’s Celtic roots.

Story continues below advertisement

The activities chosen for the visit reflect the couple’s interests, including literacy, education, sustainability and the arts, while also adhering to the tour’s theme of commemorating Canada’s past and looking ahead to the future.

Robert Finch, chairman of the Monarchist League of Canada, says Charles’s interests speak to Canadians both young and old.

“Things like the environment, bridging the gap between different religions, these are things that Canadians — even young Canadians — really gravitate toward,” he says.

The remainder of the tour will include speeches, 21-gun salutes, walkabouts, and meetings with various community groups and organizations.

WATCH: Should taxpayers pay for the royal visit?

The Nova Scotia leg of the tour will end Monday evening, when Charles and Camilla board an aircraft bound for Charlottetown. The P.E.I. capital is marking the 150th anniversary of the Charlottetown Conference, which eventually led to Confederation.

Story continues below advertisement

While in the city Tuesday, the couple will visit the legislature and attend a youth parliament debate. The Prince of Wales will also be honoured with a medal recognizing his contributions to Canada and deliver his second speech of the tour.

Charles and Camilla will tour the city’s arts centre guided by an actress playing Anne of Green Gables before flying to Winnipeg, where they will meet with children and learn about another famous cultural export: Winnie the Pooh. Charles will also have the opportunity to feed a polar bear at a conservation facility in the Manitoba city — the last stop of their visit.

Charles will deliver two more speeches in Winnipeg before he and Camilla put another royal tour into Canada’s history books.

LIVE BLOG: The Royals in Halifax

Advertisement

Sponsored content

AdChoices