Prince William Teases a Surprising Future for Prince George: Will He Follow in His Father’s and Uncle Harry’s Footsteps?
Prince William Teases a Surprising Future for Prince George: Will He Follow in His Father’s and Uncle Harry’s Footsteps?
The Prince of Wales spoke about his eldest son’s potential during a Buckingham Palace garden party
- Prince William said at the latest Buckingham Palace garden party that Prince George is a “potential pilot in the making”
- Prince William and Kate Middleton both hold honorary roles with the Royal Air Force and have pilots in their families
- King Charles appointed Prince William as Colonel-in-Chief of the Army Air Corps, making him the ceremonial head of Prince Harry’s former unit
Prince William is alluding to the aerial path Prince George might follow just like him and Prince Harry.
On May 21, the Prince of Wales, 41, spoke about his eldest son during a garden party he hosted at Buckingham Palace with support from his cousins Princess Beatrice, Princess Eugenie, Peter Phillips and Zara Tindall. Prince William and Kate Middleton are parents to Prince George, 10, Princess Charlotte, 9, and Prince Louis, 6, and William’s comment came as Princess Kate is outside of the spotlight while receiving cancer treatment.
During a chat with Squadron Leader Chrissie Lacey, a padre serving at RAF Coningsby, Prince William said that Prince George would love to visit the hub because he is a “potential pilot in the making,” Hello! reported.
The dad’s comment comes after George appeared enthralled during a surprise visit to the Royal International Air Tattoo at Royal Air Force (RAF) Fairford last summer. In July 2023, the Prince and Princess of Wales took their kids on a private trip to the world’s largest military air show, where George and Louis seemed especially excited by everything they saw.
“The family were all looking forward to the trip,” a royal source told PEOPLE about the unannounced outing, which came as a school vacation treat for the kids.
Prince George previously made his debut at the Royal International Air Tattoo in 2016 at age 2 ½, where he could already identify parts of planes.
“I imagine his father has told him about helicopters, so he knew what that was called and kept saying, ‘tail rotor.’ It was good to see his technical knowledge! Some training going on early!” Flight Lieutenant Jim Hobkirk told PEOPLE.