NewRoyal Family

Kate Middleton fight William for trying to take prince George and the kids away from her amid cancer

Despite the fact that Prince William and Kate Middleton are considered to be the ideal representatives of the royal family, they have nonetheless broken significant rules in the past.

They are prohibited from signing autographs, making public displays of affection, and getting married without first obtaining permission. Their travel constitutes yet another crucial rule to safeguard the royal lineage; heirs to the throne are prohibited from flying together. William and his son, Prince George, who is currently second in line to the throne, are directly impacted by this rule. He will no longer be able to travel with his father after the age of 12 in order to maintain the stability of the monarchy. The custom was established to safeguard an heir to the throne in the event of a plane crash.

However, only with the permission of the late Queen Elizabeth II have William and Kate broken this rule on multiple occasions. The couple took George, then 9 months old, on a flight to both New Zealand and Australia in 2014. At the time, it was said that they needed permission from the monarch because traveling with two heirs to the throne could be risky.

William didn’t travel on his own until he was 12 because he had to follow the same rules for traveling as his son. With the family, which included Lord Charles, Princess Diana, and Prince Harry, they were indivisible on flights. Lord Charles’s previous pilot, Graham Laurie, told All Right Magazine, “We flew each of them up until Prince William was 12 years old: the prince, the princess, Prince William, and Prince Harry.” He explained, “We could only fly all four together when they were young with written permission from Her Majesty. After that, he had to have his own aircraft.”

Laurie continued, “When William turned 12 years old, he would normally fly in a 125 from Northolt, and we would fly the 146 out with the other three on the former.”

Press secretary to Queen Elizabeth II, Dickie Arbiter, noted that the royals must adhere to more than just travel regulations. Blood types that match the blood types of passengers are on royal aircraft. He elaborated, “You’ve got to make sure that you’re covering every eventuality, and the aircraft would carry blood in case there was a blood transfusion.”

On Hello! A Right Royal Podcast, there will never be any assurance you will get the right sort of blood at your objective. There are other medical considerations in addition to blood. In 2016, Gordon Rayner of The Telegraph revealed that a Royal Naval Force specialist would go with the sovereign on her world visits, exploring local hospitals in nations where a dependable blood supply is sketchy. The sovereign and the Prince of Wales both travel with their very own packs of blood. “Their doctor is never more than a couple of paces away, carrying a massive medical pack containing a portable defibrillator and every conceivable kind of emergency medication,” he added.

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