In a warm finale to his four-day U.S. tour, King Charles closed out at Shenandoah National Park with an unexpected honor — and a series of intimate moments that delighted locals and young rangers alike. Read on to discover the full story!
At the April 30 ceremony the monarch was made a junior ranger, receiving a special passport stamp marking the U.S. 250th and the state visit. National Park Service deputy regional director Kirsten Talken-Spaulding explained the junior ranger role is about conservation, not age, praising the King as a committed conservationist.
Charles met women of the Monacan nation and traded memories about gathering honey and losing native trees. Chief Diane Shields called him a "gentle soul" after he gifted a crystal honey pot etched with his cypher — the nation plans to display it at their visitors' center.