12 Sep 2022

Prince Andrew to care for Queen's beloved corgis

11:46 am on 12 September 2022
Queen Elizabeth II talks with members of the Manitoba Corgi Association during a visit to Winnipeg, Canada on 8 October 2002.

Queen Elizabeth II is pictured during a 2002 visit to Canada, where she met with members of the Manitoba Corgi Association. Photo: ADRIAN WYLD

Queen Elizabeth II's corgis are going to live with her son Prince Andrew and his ex-wife, the BBC has confirmed.

The Duke of York and Sarah, Duchess of York will take on Muick and Sandy - two young corgis that the prince and his daughters gave the Queen as a present in 2021.

The Queen also had a dorgi - a dachshund-corgi cross - named Candy, which she was pictured with in January.

Her Majesty owned more than 30 corgis during her lifetime.

So strong was the association that well-wishers almost immediately began asking who would adopt the dogs.

A source close to Prince Andrew told the BBC: "The corgis will return to live at Royal Lodge with the Duke and Duchess. It was the Duchess who found the puppies which were gifted to Her Majesty by the Duke.

"The Duchess bonded with Her Majesty over dog walking and riding horses, and even after her divorce, she would continue her great friendship with Her Majesty, by walking the dogs in Frogmore and chatting."

Royal Lodge, a mansion in the grounds of the Windsor Estate, is the home of Prince Andrew and his ex-wife, and Frogmore is an estate next to Windsor Castle.

Queen Elizabeth II poses with one of her corgi dogs in a photo taken on 26 February, 1970.

The Queen, pictured with one of her corgis in 1970, owned more than 30 corgis and dorgis over six decades. Many were descended from Susan - the dog she received as an 18th birthday present from her father in 1944. Photo: CENTRAL PRESS / AFP

The duke, 62, and his daughters Beatrice and Eugenie, initially gave the Queen Muick and another puppy named Fergus last spring. The goal was to lift the Queen's spirits while her husband, the late prince Philip, was in hospital and amid the Covid-19 lockdown.

Muick, pronounced "Mick", is a corgi, named after Loch Muick, on the royal Balmoral estate.

Fergus, a dorgi, was named after the Queen's maternal uncle, Captain Fergus Bowes-Lyon, who was killed in action during World War I. The puppy died in May aged just five months, reportedly due to a heart defect. The Queen was said to be devastated.

Prince Andrew then gave her another corgi puppy, Sandy, on her official 95th birthday.

The Queen's dresser, personal assistant and long-standing friend Angela Kelly said recently that the new arrivals had proved a "constant joy" and "always brought a smile to everyone's faces".

18th birthday present

The Queen was an enthusiastic corgi breeder, and owned more than 30 corgis and dorgis over six decades. Many were descended from Susan - the dog she received as an 18th birthday present from her father in 1944.

The royal household's breeding programme wound up several years ago, however, as the Queen was said to be unwilling to leave young dogs behind when she died.

(FILES) In this file picture released in London on February 4, 2022, and taken last month, shows Britain's Queen Elizabeth II stroking Candy, her dorgi dog, as she looks at a display of memorabilia from her Golden and Platinum Jubilees, in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle, west of London. (Photo by Steve Parsons / POOL / AFP)

The Queen with her dorgi (a mix between a corgi and a dachshund) Candy earlier this year. Photo: AFP

There has been speculation that Prince Andrew, knowing this, may have assured his mother he would care for the dogs if the need arose.

The prince and his ex-wife the duchess have remained very close since their divorce in 1996, so her involvement does not come as a surprise.

The duchess said the Queen had been "the most incredible mother-in-law and friend" to her and that she would miss her "more than words can express".

- BBC

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