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Home » ‘I jumped into a royal’s Land Rover – and the gossip didn’t disappoint’
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‘I jumped into a royal’s Land Rover – and the gossip didn’t disappoint’

thebusinesstimes.co.ukBy thebusinesstimes.co.uk25 May 20260 Views
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‘I jumped into a royal’s Land Rover – and the gossip didn’t disappoint’
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Sandringham’s Royal Safari attracts history lovers and bird watchers alike, but it’s those who know the stories behind palace walls who really bring the sweeping Victorian estate to life

15:40, 22 May 2026Updated 07:10, 25 May 2026

We went on a royal safari at Sandringham

As we hop aboard one of Prince Philip’s iconic green Land Rovers, our Sandringham safari guide paints a rip-roaring portrait of how the late Duke of Edinburgh would kick off a drive – complete with plenty of sharp banter over who in the family was the worst shot.

It’s the first of many fond anecdotes about the Royal Family, the undisputed “bosses” of the tight-knit Norfolk community. Here, the quaint tenant cottages with their duck-egg blue front doors are just as quintessentially Sandringham as the extraordinary country house, where The Firm gathers for Christmas lunch – a tradition that, year after year, wins out against gossip, scandal, and in recent times, utter mortification.

It is the loyal staff members, chatting cheerfully around the vast, beautiful estate, who know what really goes on behind palace walls. It is they who sit at the back of the ornate ballroom turned family cinema room during cosy movie nights, and who learned to keep well out of the way when the elderly Prince Philip would come charging down the bumpy country roads in his carriage.

As our good-humoured guide puts it, with a slight twinkle in her eye: “They know more than the history books.”

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Our jeep zips along the lanes of Wolferton, passing by Park House – the turbulent childhood home of Princess Diana – which was once used as a sanctuary for unmarried women to avoid any “shenanigans” between the sexes. Its male counterpart, situated much closer to the main house, is York Cottage, historically known as the ‘Bachelor’s Cottage.’ Built as an overflow for shooting guests, it was a clever way for the family to keep a watchful eye on energetic, scandal-prone singletons.

Royal scandal is baked into the very soil here. Wolferton boasts an old-world charm straight out of an Enid Blyton book, but it was also the historic site where Queen Victoria’s caddish son – the future King Edward VII, then known as ‘Dirty Bertie’ – would smuggle mistresses and actresses over from London, by way of the now closed but perfectly preserved Wolferton Royal Station.

Dismayed by her eldest son’s playboy reputation, Victoria had hoped that building a home for Bertie and his wife, Princess Alexandra of Denmark, would curtail his brothel frequenting. Unfortunately, the wild house parties that ensued became infamous. Victoria would later blame Bertie’s indiscreet behaviour for heaping too much stress on Prince Albert, resulting in his tragic death at 42. As our guide later shrugged beside a decidedly unamused portrait of Victoria: “Families!”

While Sandringham House was famously despised by the late Princess Diana, who told biographer Andrew Morton that festive breaks there were “highly fraught” and “terrifying”, in May, it makes for an undeniably gorgeous drive. The intense green of the estate is broken by vivid purple splashes of rhododendron.

Unlike his mother before him, the green-fingered King Charles III cannot bear to cut back the pretty hedgerows, which are home to everything from the waddling red-legged partridge to the swooping Marsh Harrier. Sandringham’s teeming wildlife attracts keen bird watchers, and there is plenty of happy chatter and exclamations from our jeep.

Much of the unfolding story of Sandringham lies in the estate’s array of residences and their ever-changing purposes. At one point in our tour, the guide stops to direct our gaze across the fields to the secluded Wood Farm. Although not visible from the road, the location illustrates just how private this family “bolthole” actually is. For King Charles, the first monarch to earn a degree, it holds carefree student memories of weekends off from Cambridge, offering the young prince and his pals a peaceful retreat from campus life.

A delicious afternoon tea follows the three-hour tour at the relaxed and airy Sandringham Courtyard Restaurant. Here, we enjoy an array of savoury finger sandwiches – my personal favourite is the Isle of Skye smoked salmon. Warm scones with jam and cream followed, after which I still find room for a bit of cake. Don’t sleep on the excellent lemon drizzle, which was the perfect palate cleanser on a warm spring day.

All this is washed down by, as you’d expect, a very decent cup of tea. The quality of the ingredients here really is superb, with many of the seasonal produce sourced straight from the estate itself, including Sandringham’s signature honey, with its floral notes reflecting the sweet-smelling local wildflowers, and famed avenues of zesty lime trees.

You’ll be pleased to know you can pick up a pot from the marvellous gift shop, which also sells bottles of gin, replica royal wedding rings, and a bucketload of cuddly toy corgis.

I walk off my lunch with a stroll around some of the house’s ground-floor rooms. While the outer edges of Sandringham feel much like any other accessible outdoorsy attraction, the area surrounding the main house is guarded by an ironclad, around-the-clock security presence.

Regardless of safety precautions, Sandringham House doesn’t feel like a fortress, and neither does it feel like a museum frozen in time. Under the King’s guidance. Sandringham House offers a glimpse into the Windsors’ domestic life, with family photos, chocolate boxes, half-finished jigsaws and board game stacks, alongside Goya artworks and priceless china.

Festive menus are set out in the dining room, set out with candles and roses just as it was at the King’s New Year’s Dinner, where guests included the King of New Year’s himself, Jools Holland, who, of course, dashed out a tune or two on the piano. While it’s perhaps not the most relatable family home, it does have a lived-in feel.

Romantic souls will also be pleased to know that you can can a turn in the lavish ballroom, where glittering chandeliers sparkle overhead. While it may not be as lively as in Bertie’s day, it doesn’t take much imagination to imagine the orchestra striking the first note of the evening, or the rustle of fabric against the dancefloor. But it’s the little conversational details that bring Sandringham to life. Staff are on hand throughout to share fascinating historical facts and personal memories alike, reminiscing over how the late Queen, as a young mother, would dress the tree in the drawing room with her children, and how, while not a “disco girl”, she was a dab hand when it came to a traditional Scottish jig.

This is the family that those who’ve worked for the royals truly know. Some staff members, whose parents lived here before them, would even play with Prince Edward and Andrew as children, childhoods intertwined. There is genuine affection here for the bosses and their various eccentricities. But as with all families, certain rooms are strictly off-limits to guests.

Do you have a story to share? Email me at [email protected]

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