Will king charles iii champion the countryside?

2 min read

JOHN CRAVEN

COUNTRYFILE ISSUES

King Charles III, then Prince of Wales, and patron of the National Hedgelaying Society, speaks at a hedgelaying event at Highgrove Estate, Gloucestershire in December 2021
Photo: Getty, Sean Malyon

On the night of the Queen’s death, I was presenting an award at a heartwarming ceremony in London to honour some remarkable animals, mainly dogs. The solemn news spread quickly and I wondered whether the event might be cancelled.

Within minutes, we heard that it would go ahead in a respectful fashion. The Queen had been patron of the Dogs Trust, one of the organisers, and, as if in tribute, the many dogs in the room behaved impeccably.

But looking round, it suddenly struck me that I was one of the few people there who, as a child, had sung ‘God Save the King’. On a February afternoon in 1952, the headmaster had called us together to solemnly announce the King had died and a lovely young lady was now our Queen.

Now, 70 years later, we have a King again and although there will be changes, one reassuring constant is the knowledge that the monarch, like his mother, is very much at home in the British countryside. There are differences, of course – he prefers terriers to corgis and, unlike the late Queen, who never let anyone know her opinions, her eldest son never held back.

During his long apprenticeship, he was an ardent and often outspoken supporter of rural ways. He first highlighted environmental issues in the 1970s, drawing attention to the “horrifying effects of pollution”, and he has been a staunch supporter of sustainability and organic farming while opposing the genetic modification of crops. He raised concerns over climate change years before other world leaders did and his views on everything, from modern architecture to alternative medicine, have often attracted criticism. “Because I suggested there were better ways of doing things in the nicest possible way, and in a more balanced and integrated way, I was accused of interfering and meddling,” he once told the BBC.

PROTECTOR OF TRADITION

His concept of how new towns should look in the countryside, with social and private housing blended, led to the creation of Poundbury on Duchy land in Dorset. Despite its opponents, the project now has a thriving communi

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