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Smiling Kate Middleton ‘buzzing’ for World Bee Day in sweet new photo

Kate shares sweet photo to mark World Bee Day.
Kate shared the photo to ‘raise awareness of the essential role bees play’ for the planet (Picture: AP)

The Princess of Wales was seen smiling in a sweet new photograph showing her tending to a hive to mark World Bee Day.

The picture was taken last summer at the Anmer Hall property Kate shares with William on the Sandringham Estate and where she keeps bees.

A tweet posted alongside the photograph, reads: ‘We are buzzing about #WorldBeeDay. Bees are a vital part of our ecosystem and today is a great opportunity to raise awareness of the essential role bees and other pollinators play in keeping people and the planet healthy.’

Buckingham Palace beekeepers have also been pictured hard at work.

The Queen is a keen apiarist, and keeps bees at Raymill, her six-bedroom retreat in Lacock, Wiltshire, 17 miles from the King’s Highgrove home.

During a visit to Launceston, Cornwall, last summer, Camilla met honey-producers selling jars in the town square, revealing she was a hands-on beekeeper and had only lost one colony during the previous winter.

Honey produced by Her Majesty’s bees is sold at Fortnum & Mason to raise funds for charity.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 SATURDAY MAY 20 Royal beekeepers John House and Caroline Geheran handle a frame from one of the hives in the gardens of Buckingham Palace in London. Picture date: Thursday May 18, 2023. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
Royal beekeepers John House and Caroline Geheran handle a frame from one of the hives in the gardens of Buckingham Palace (Picture: PA)
EMBARGOED TO 0001 SATURDAY MAY 20 Royal beekeepers John House and Caroline Geheran handle a frame from one of the hives in the gardens of Buckingham Palace in London. Picture date: Thursday May 18, 2023. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire
World Bee Day is on May 20 (Picture: PA)

This year’s recipient is Nigeria’s first sexual assault referral centre, which the Queen supports as patron.

She is also president of Bees For Development, a charity training beekeepers and protecting bee habitats in more than 50 countries.

Buckingham Palace is home to four beehives on an island in a lake in the garden, and are two hives in Clarence House’s garden.

They produced more than 300 jars of honey last year for the palace kitchens, and it was often served in honey madeleines, as a filling for chocolate truffles or in honey and cream sponge.

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