Charles: Celebs Rumors

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Prince Andrew handed huge lifeline with 'perfect' opportunity from King Charles

King Charles is on the hunt for a new high-flying employee with a "competitive" salary and attractive benefits, which could be the "perfect" opportunity for Prince Andrew to make his royal comeback.The Daily Mail's Royal correspondent Richard Eden cheekily suggested that this could be the ideal way for the Duke of York to return to Royal duties after stepping back five years ago.The job in question is a helicopter pilot who would enjoy a "competitive" salary and be responsible for flying members of the Royal Family around the UK for official engagements. Prince Andrew has previous experience in this area, having served as a helicopter pilot and warship captain during the Falklands War aboard the HMS Invincible.The job advert on the Royal Household website is seeking an "experienced multi-engine helicopter commander" who could serve as either the main pilot or co-pilot.The ad reads: "The King's Helicopter Flight (TKHF) consists of a small team of pilots and ground support staff who provide an exceptional helicopter travel service to Members of the Royal Family undertaking official engagements across the UK." Alongside the technical requirements, including "extensive flying experience in multi-engine helicopters", the successful candidate will need to show "high levels of initiative, pro-activity and problem-solving capability," reports the Scottish Daily Express.
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nypost.com
King Charles was foraging mushrooms as Queen Elizabeth lay dying: tell-all
not the gossipy kind.A new book has alleged that then-Prince Charles was in the woods foraging in the muck for mushrooms on Sept. 8, the day Queen Elizabeth died.Charles, 74, flew to Balmoral Castle with his sister, Princess Anne, that morning after they were alerted about their mother’s bad health, wrote Robert Jobson in his book “Our King: Charles III: The Man and the Monarch Revealed.” After spending several hours with the queen, Charles went to his nearby Birkhall estate, as there “seemed no immediate reason for alarm,” according to an excerpt published in the Daily Mail.Charles then went for a walk in the “surrounding woods, armed with a walking cane and a basket” to scope for vegetables.“More importantly, he was drawing solace and strength from the trees, the smell of the earth and the murmur of the River Muick,” Jobson wrote.“Understandably lost in thought, the prince knew that the defining moment of his life, at the advanced age of 73, was fast approaching: the death of his mother and his accession as king,” he added.While his protection officers had “deliberately hung back to give him some privacy,” they knew which part of the grounds Charles was scrounging for mushrooms.
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