For a solitary day of reflection, King Charles has retired to his Highgrove palace in Gloucestershire.
A day was reserved for the incoming monarch to spend away from official duties at his family home as part of the London Bridge preparations for what would happen following the Queen’s passing.
Although it is thought he will be working in preparation for his new position and collecting his red boxes of state paperwork, he is not anticipated to attend any public events.
The King will spend his first day out of the public spotlight since the death of his mother at his beloved Highgrove House near Tetbury, Gloucestershire, a Georgian neo-classical house that serves as the private home for the monarch the Queen Consort.
A passionate gardener and environmentalist, King Charles has spent over 40 years transforming the gardens around the house.
over 40 years of transforming the gardens around the house.
The home has been owned by various families until it was purchased by the Duchy of Cornwall from former prime minister Harold Macmillan’s son, Maurice Macmillan, in 1980.
Image:The Prince of Wales in the gardens of his home in Highgrove
He and his then-wife Princess Diana renovated the property with neo-classical additions in 1987 and the interior was stripped out and redecorated.
The Duchess of Cornwall with her dog Beth at Highgrove
The King’s passion project has been the estate’s gardens, which were overgrown and untended when he first moved in but have since been completely overhauled.
The green-fingered monarch introduced a wild garden, formal garden, walled kitchen, and a stumpery.
His environmental beliefs are echoed on the estate, which includes solar panels, biomass boilers, and air source heat pumps, while waste from the house is filtered through a natural reed bed sewage system.
The Prince of Wales flanked by his sons Princes William and Harry at Highgrove
Fruit and vegetables from the kitchen garden are used for meals at Charles and Camilla’s table, while flowers in the garden are used to decorate the house.
The King has also planted rare trees and plants for future generations and heritage seeds have been planted to ensure they flourish.
The monarch has said: “One of my greatest joys is to see the pleasure that the garden can bring to many of the visitors and that everybody seems to find some part of it that is special to them.”
Guests and the public have been able to tour the gardens since 1994 and thousands visit each year.
It remains to be seen where the King will live during his reign.
Traditionally the monarch would live at Buckingham Palace, though a friend previously told the Mail on Sunday: “Despite what everybody thinks about him not wanting to live there, he will certainly have accommodation there – but it will be a much more modest flat-above-the-shop situation akin to that of the Prime Minister at Downing Street.”
The house technically belongs to the Duchy of Cornwall, so has passed to Prince William who is the new Duke of Cornwall.
It means the King could pay his son an estimated £700,000 a year in rent to stay at Highgrove, according to the Daily Mail.