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Prince Harry at the botanic gardens in Kingstown. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
Prince Harry at the botanic gardens in Kingstown. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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His Royal Highness Prince Henry of Wales (Prince Harry) receives the Royal Salute at the Cruise Ship Berth In Kingstown at the beginning of his Royal Visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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Prince Harry inspects an honour guard at the Cruise Ship Berth In Kingstown at the beginning of his Royal Visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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Governor General Sir Frederick Ballantyne introduces Prince Harry to Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, Opposition Leader, Dr. Godwin Friday, second left, and other dignitaries at the Cruise Ship Terminal in Kingstown on Saturday. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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Prince Harry chats with students at the Botanic Gardens in Kingstown, the western world’s oldest, during his visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. He is escorted by curator of the gardens, Gordon Shallow, right. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry plants a baobab tree at the botanic gardens in Kingstown, the oldest in the western world, during his visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. He is assisted by Governor General Sir Frederick Ballantyne, right. Curator of the gardens, Gordon Shallow, is at centre. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)

 

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Sweat marks appear on Prince Harry’s shirt as well as that of Governor General Sir Frederick Ballantyne, left, as they listen to students of Kingstown Government School sing at the botanic gardens on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)

 

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Prince Harry and National Parks workers walk along some steps near the Vermont Nature Trail during his one-day official visit to St. Vincent. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry examines a basket of agricultural produce presented to him in Vermont, an agricultural district in St. Vincent’s southern interior, during his Royal Visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry and a National Parks worker sit and chat outside a shop in Vermont, an agricultural district in St. Vincent’s southern interior, during his Royal Visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry chats with Vermont residents Ashika Ollivierre near a shop in Vermont, an agricultural district in St. Vincent’s southern interior, during his Royal Visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry chats with Vermont resident Ashika Ollivierre near a shop in Vermont, an agricultural district in St. Vincent’s southern interior, during his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry stands in front of pieces of art produced by students who competed in the Ministry of Fisheries’ essay and art competition under the theme “No Extinction In Our Generation. Save Our Sea Turtles”. The pieces of art were on display in Colonairie on St. Vincent’s northeast coast, where he unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byera beach a turtle sanctuary during his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Prince Harry poses with some of the students who participated in Ministry of Fisheries’ essay and art competition under the theme “No Extinction In Our Generation. Save Our Sea Turtles” in Colonairie on St. Vincent’s northeast coast, where he unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byera beach a turtle sanctuary during his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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“LIKE LOOKING IN THE MIRROR!” Prince Harry holds up a drawing of him made by a Primary School student who participated in Ministry of Fisheries’ essay and art competition under the theme “No Extinction In Our Generation. Save Our Sea Turtles” in Colonairie on St. Vincent’s northeast coast, where he unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byera beach a turtle sanctuary during his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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From right: Prince Harry, Governor General Sir Frederick Ballantyne, Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Ralph Gonsalves and his wife, Eloise Gonsalves, among other persons in Colonairie on St. Vincent’s northeast coast, where the prince unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byera beach a turtle sanctuary during his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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“I wonder if I can convince him to say ‘Labour love?’” Could this be what a very pensive Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, left, is thinking at Colonairie, a community in North Central Windward, which he represents in Parliament, during Prince Harry’s royal visit on Saturday? An equally pensive looking Prince Harry is seated to the left of Governor General Sir Frederick Ballantyne. In Colonairie, Prince Harry presented prizes to the winners in the Ministry of Fisheries’ essay and art competition on the theme “No Extinction In Our Generation: Save Our Sea Turtles” and also unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byrea Beach a turtle sanctuary. (Photo: Ovid Burke/IWN)
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Co-founder of the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Preservation Fund, Louise Mitchell, left, and chair of the National Parks Authority Board, Gideon Nash, centre, present Prince Harry with a piece of Nzimbu Browne’s banana leaf art during the prince’s stop in Colonairie on Saturday as part of his royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines. In Colonairie, Prince Harry presented prizes to the winners in the Ministry of Fisheries’ essay and art competition on the theme “No Extinction In Our Generation: Save Our Sea Turtles” and also unveiled a monument declaring the Colonairie/Byrea Beach a turtle sanctuary. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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Prince Harry admires artwork on a monument he unveiled moments earlier on Saturday in Colonairie, declaring the Colonairie/Byrea Beach a turtle sanctuary. Prince Harry visited the North Central Windward community, the birthplace of Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves, during his one-day royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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Prince Harry poses with artist Kithesha James, who painted the artwork on the monument in Colonairie that the prince unveiled, declaring the Colonairie/Byrea Beach a turtle Sanctuary, during his one-day royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Saturday. The prince also presented prizes to the winners in a student essay and art competition on the theme “No Extinction In My Generation: Save The Turtles”. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)
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From left: Director of the National Parks Authority, Andrew Wilson, Chief Fisheries Officer, Jennifer Cruickshank-Howard, Prince Harry and artist Kithesha James pose next to the monument Prince Harry unveiled in Colonairie declaring the Colonairie/Byrea Beach a turtle sanctuary on Saturday. The prince was in Colonairie as part of his one-day royal visit to St. Vincent and the Grenadines. (Photo: Kenton X. Chance/IWN)

2 replies on “PHOTOS: Prince Harry visits St. Vincent”

  1. Nothing but love for our colonial masters. And to show how much we love and appreciate your continued control, we’ll bring out the bells and whistles and stop at nothing to show you how happy we are for you to just grace us with presence. Oh how I love my colonial mentality! I don’t care what anyone says, I love the state of affairs.

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