Guernsey Press

Royal tours of Australia: Security scares, a kiss and the baby republican slayer

The King is embarking on his 16th official visit and 17th overall to Australia – but his first as the country’s monarch.

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A beach-side kiss from a model in a bikini, a shooting security scare and a formative teenage trip to the Outback are just some of the King’s experiences in Australia over the years.

Charles is embarking on his 16th official visit and 17th overall to Australia – and his first as the country’s monarch and for Queen Camilla in her role as consort.

Charles wears a mulka string, a feather stringed headband, as he takes part in a traditional welcome ceremony during a visit to Mount Nhulun in 2018
Charles wears a mulka string, a feather-stringed headband, during a visit to Mount Nhulun in 2018 (Phil Noble/PA)

The prince was pictured in a feather headdress known as a mulka string and was given a spiritual blessing by the world didgeridoo master in the small Aboriginal community of Yirrkala in Northeast Arnhem Land.

Camilla paddled barefoot on Broadbeach on the Gold Coast – but Charles kept his brogues on – and the couple attended the Commonwealth Games.

Royal visit to Australia – Day Two
Charles and Camilla visit Broadbeach on their trip to the Gold Coast in 2018 (Steve Parsons/PA)

A Diamond Jubilee tour in 2012 saw Charles and Camilla cuddle koalas at Government House in Adelaide, with Charles quipping “something ominous will run down” about the animals’ reputation for having weak bladders.

The then-Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall holding their boomerangs in 2015
The then-Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall holding their boomerangs in 2015 (John Stillwell/PA)

Afterwards, he described it as a “most wonderful experience”.

He swam on the Barrier Reef, ran cattle in Queensland and attended a feast in New Guinea.

A young Charles in Sydney in 1966
A young Charles looks at a canoe on the beach in Sydney in 1966 (PA)

His first official visit to Australia came in 1970 when he and sister Princess Anne joined Queen Elizabeth II’s tour.

Royalty – Royal Tour of Australia – Sydney
The late Queen Elizabeth II with Prince Charles and Princess Anne at the Royal Easter Show in Sydney in 1970 (PA)

But the visit is famous for an encounter he had with a bikini-clad woman on a beach.

Charles was pounced on by model Jane Priest while taking an early morning dip, and images of the wave-side kiss were printed around the world.

Ms Priest later divulged the incident on Cottesloe Beach in Perth was a publicity stunt to try to make Charles appear more accessible.

She also recalled how the “adorable” prince told her when she put her hands on his chest: “I can’t touch you.”

Within four years, Charles had married Lady Diana Spencer and they had welcomed his first child, Prince William.

The Prince and Princess of Wales undertook a six-week tour to Australia and New Zealand in 1983.

Royalty – Prince William – Auckland, New Zealand
Diana and Charles amuse baby Prince William in the grounds of Government House in Auckland, New Zealand (PA)

Ten-month-old William attended a photocall and crawled across a rug on the lawns of Government House in Auckland, New Zealand, watched by his parents.

Charles and Diana’s tours to Australia were, however, subject to tension.

Diana told her biographer Andrew Morton that she was thrown into the deep end and overwhelmed by the adulation she faced from the crowds in 1983 during her first major overseas trip, while Charles became jealous at the attention she received.

Royalty – Prince and Princess of Wales Tour of Australia – Wollongong
The Prince and Princess of Wales in the sunshine at Wollongong, south of Sydney, in 1988 (Ron Bell/PA)

Charles had already turned to his now-wife Camilla Parker Bowles and Diana was having an affair with cavalry officer James Hewitt.

More than 30 years after the Waleses took William to Australia, he returned with his own son Prince George and wife the then-Duchess of Cambridge.

William, Kate and Prince George meet a Bilby called George at Taronga Zoo in Sydney, Australia in 2014
William, Kate and Prince George meet a bilby called George at Taronga Zoo in Sydney in 2014 (Chris Jackson/PA)

Nine-month-old George was dubbed the “republican slayer” for boosting the monarchy’s appeal on his first official overseas tour.

He met a bilby named after him, stole another baby’s toy on a play date and, according to his mother Kate, gained an extra fat roll while he was away.

Royal baby news coincided with the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s 2018 tour, with Harry and Meghan announcing she was pregnant on the eve of a high-profile 16-day trip to Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Tonga.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex meet members of surfing community group One Wave during a visit to South Bondi Beach in Sydney in 2018
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex meet members of surfing community group One Wave at South Bondi Beach in 2018 (Dominic Lipinski/PA)

Harry ran into difficulties during his gap year in 2003 when he worked as a jackaroo – an Australian cowboy – on a cattle ranch in Queensland.

Harry holds a ring-tailed possum at Taronga Zoo in Sydney to mark the star of his gap year in 2003
Harry holds a ring-tailed possum at Taronga Zoo in Sydney to mark the start of his gap year in 2003 (Phil Noble/PA)

Sydney meanwhile was the scene of a major royal security scare for Harry’s father.

In 1994, there were dramatic scenes when student David Kang was wrestled to the ground after firing a starting pistol as Charles stood to make a speech.

The prince appears relaxed in Sydney the day after a security scare in 1994
The prince chats to people in Sydney the day after a security scare in 1994 (Martin Keene/PA)

There was controversy during the Queen and Prince Philip, the late Duke of Edinburgh’s Golden Jubilee tour of 2002 when Philip asked an Aboriginal businessman: “Do you still throw spears at each other?”

The Queen and Philip watch a culture show at Tjapukai Aboriginal Culture Park, Cairns, Australia in 2002
The Queen and Philip watch a culture show at Tjapukai Aboriginal Culture Park, Cairns, in 2002 (Fiona Hanson/PA)

Mr Brim, who met the duke during a royal visit to the Tjapukai Aboriginal Park in northern Cairns, branded Philip a “larrikin” (joker) and said he was not offended but described the question as “naive”.

On a tour by the Queen in 1992, the country’s then premier Paul Keating was dubbed the “Lizard of Oz” after cameras caught him giving the monarch a helping hand at Canberra’s Parliament House by touching her back.

Charles arrives at RAAF Darwin in Australia’s Northern Territory in 2018
Charles arrives at RAAF Darwin in Australia’s Northern Territory in 2018 (Steve Parsons/PA)

She considered him as a future governor-general of Australia – the Queen’s representative in the realm – but only once he was married, archive documents from the 1970s suggested.

Speculation in the press had reached the prince, then a Royal Navy officer, who said in a interview if there was interest in him taking up the role he would be “delighted to consider it”.

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