The Duchess of Cambridge is teaching her children, Prince George and Princess Charlotte to be farmers.
People look at them as elite individuals, but they try to live as ordinary persons.
Kate Middleton, the Duchess of Cambridge, has revealed she teaches her children about farming so that they will have what it takes to farm when they grow up.
Before they got married in 2011, the Duchess worked briefly at the high street store Jigsaw and then worked for her parents’ firm, Party Pieces. The Duke, on the other hand, joined the armed forces after studying at university and now works as an air ambulance pilot.
The family now composing Kate Middleton, Prince William and the two kids, Prince George and Princess Charlotte, have 130,000 acres of land.
This is coming their way when the Duke of Cambridge eventually inherits the Duchy of Cornwall from the Prince of Wales.
Thus, the family will surely have wide area to drive tractors and combine harvesters.
On Thursday, the Royal family had their first official visit to the Duchy.
During their visit, the Duke and Duchess said they had found it difficult to decide what to do with their lives while they wait to become king and queen.
Because of this, they suggested they had pleasure in tending the land and farming.
At Zebs Youth Centre in Truro, Cornwall, the Duchess, 34, asked the teenagers: “Do any of you know what you would love to be? Do you have some aspirations?”
The Duke, also 34, cut in: “It is totally cool not to have that by the way. It took me an awfully long time to work out what I wanted to be.”
The Duchess agreed: “It’s so difficult because there’s so much out there. It is hard isn’t it to pinpoint one thing. William is right. I found it difficult as well.”
Miss Hodge said: “She said she was teaching George and Charlotte all about the farm at Sandringham. She’s been teaching George the difference between barley and wheat and everything they grow on the farm there.
“She wants the children to learn all about farming and the apples in their orchard. She said she’d secretly like to be a young farmer.”