The inaugural birthday parade of King Charles III was rounded off Saturday, Britain’s royal family with a balcony appearance at Buckingham Palace to watch a spectacular fly-past.
Future king Prince George, Prince Louis, and Princess Charlotte, three of the king’s young grandchildren, joined the rest of the family on the balcony wearing red ties and blue blazers, while Charlotte wore a sailor suit with red trim.
The throng gathered in The Mall, the boulevard leading up to the palace, and cheered them on.
After a 41-gun salute from neighboring Green Park in central London, the air show of over 70 military aircraft took place after inclement weather cut short a scheduled fly-past for Charles’s crowning on May 6.
The Royal Air Force’s aerobatic display team, the Red Arrows, left a trail of red, white, and blue vapors as the performance came to a conclusion.
Earlier, Charles saddled up for the annual Trooping the Colour parade that marks the British sovereign’s official birthday.
It was the first time the monarch has ridden at the ceremony since his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in 1986.
Charles, who also took the royal salute, was followed on horseback as he inspected the troops by his eldest son and heir, Prince William, Charles’ brother Edward, the Duke of Edinburgh, and sister Anne, the Princess Royal.
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Queen Camilla in a military-inspired red outfit, and William’s wife Catherine, the Princess of Wales, who was dressed in green, followed in a carriage.
The colourful display of regimental precision and pageantry was the first of 74-year-old Charles’s reign.
Charles’s actual birthday is on November 14 but British sovereigns celebrate twice — once in private and again in public.
The June parade tradition began in 1748 under King George II, who wanted a celebration in better summer weather, as his own birthday was on October 30.
The televised event kicked off with a procession from Buckingham Palace to Horse Guards Parade.
Some 1,400 soldiers, 400 musicians and 200 horses took part, led in the parade by Juno, a 10-year-old shire mare, alongside three other Drum Horses — Perseus, Atlas and Apollo.
Drum Horses are the most senior animals in the army and hold the rank of major. They are traditionally named after figures from Greek mythology.
The minutely choreographed event has its origins in the display of colours or flags of different regiments to allow their soldiers to identify them in battle.
The 1st Battalion Welsh Guards trooped their colour up and down the ranks this year.
The UK is currently experiencing a hot spell which would have made it difficult for the troops in their ceremonial black bearskin hats and thick red tunics.
Unlike last weekend, however, when William inspected troops from the Household Division group of senior regiments, none of the soldiers appeared to faint.
Charles — who as head of state is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces — later led the soldiers back to the palace.