QUEEN CAMILLA'S RARE CONFESSION ABOUT PRIVATE DUTIES WITH 10 GRANDKIDS. (PHOTO).

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 Queen Camilla's rare confession about private duties with 10 grandkids Away from the public spotlight, Queen Camilla embraces her role as grandmother to ten grandchildren, balancing her royal duties with family life. She shares two children, Tom and Laura, with her former husband Andrew Parker-Bowles, and together they have five grandchildren: Lola, Freddy, Eliza, Louis, and Gus.  Through her marriage to King Charles, she also has five step-grandchildren Prince George, Princess Charlotte, Prince Louis, Prince Archie, and Princess Lilibet.  Despite her preference for keeping her private life separate, Camilla recently opened up about her passion for reading and her desire to pass that love down to future generations. During a visit to St Mungo’s in South East London, Camilla spoke about the importance of introducing children to books early, sharing how she reads to her youngest granddaughter.  The Queen’s Reading Room, her charity, has partnered with St Mungo’s to pr...

BRITAIN CLAIMS ITS FIRST OLYMPIC SNOW EVENT TITLE. (PHOTO).



 Britain claims its first Olympic snow event title

 Charlotte Bankes and Huw Nightingale made history for Britain at the Winter Olympics, capturing the nation’s first-ever gold medal on snow. The duo won Sunday’s mixed snowboardcross event, crossing the finish line first in a thrilling four-team final, securing Britain’s 15th overall Winter Games gold and its first in more than three decades outside of figure skating. The victory also marks the first time Britain has won multiple golds at a single Winter Games.

Mixed snowboardcross features teams racing down the course in a relay-style format, with four riders starting together while another waits at the top. Britain entered the final as underdogs, seeded 13th out of 16 teams, and neither Bankes nor Nightingale had shown signs of medal form in the individual events, finishing 13th and 26th, respectively. But the pair came together on a sunny day in Livigno to deliver a stunning performance. Nightingale celebrated the breakthrough, saying it was “unbelievable” and hoped it would inspire the next generation of British snowboarders. The gold adds to Britain’s skeleton title won earlier in the Games by Matt Weston, highlighting a strong showing across snow sports for the country.


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