Published: 05 November 2025. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online.
Picture this: a sunny Brazilian island with no cars, just colourful houses and sandy paths. A small navy boat pulls up, and out steps Prince William, the first royal ever to visit Paquetá. No fancy flags or music bands greet him. Instead, hundreds of smiling locals crowd a little square, waving and cheering. He waves back with a big “Bom dia!” and dives right in to shake hands.
The island sits about an hour by boat from Rio de Janeiro. Around 5,000 people call it home, and they dub this sunny day “the day of the prince.” William grins, even though he catches only bits of the Portuguese chatter. He tosses out “obrigado” – thank you – whenever it fits, and the crowd loves it.
This trip means the world to him. He comes to Brazil for his Earthshot Prize, the big award he started that hands £1 million each to five clever folks fixing the planet. But first, he wants to meet the real heroes on the ground – the indigenous people and locals battling to save nature.
He teams up with United for Wildlife, his Royal Foundation’s group that fights poaching. Before the boat ride, he shares why this matters. “Indigenous folks and local communities guard our most vital wild places,” he says. “But threats grow bigger every day. Their lives hang in danger. If we truly care about stopping climate chaos and healing nature, we stand with them.”
On Paquetá, locals nickname him “prince of the island.” He rolls up his sleeves and joins the fun. A proud mum thrusts her 10-month-old baby at him for a lucky cuddle. William catches the little one carefully and jokes, “Better not drop him!” Grandmas grab his hand for chats, kids snap endless selfies, and one 12-year-old boy skips school to hand over two paintings he made years ago, saved just for someone special.
Time flies during the walkabout. William stops for every photo and hello, running late already. But he hops into another boat anyway, heading to the Guapimirim mangroves in Guanabara Bay. These twisty trees once faced total wipeout from chopping and pollution. Now, local “guardians” nurture them back to life.
William stoops low in the muddy water and plants the first of three baby mangroves. He holds his hand about three feet up and asks, “How fast does this little guy grow to here?” The guardians smile and say mangroves shoot up pretty quick. “Look after it,” he tells them. “I hope it thrives.”
He crouches by the next sapling. “Does this go right here? Can I help push the mud?” He marvels at how they survive in salty water. Before climbing back aboard, he skips a wet wipe and rinses his hands in the nearby Caceribu river.
Eugenia Maria Dos Santos, a 60-year-old guardian, beams with pride. “What a privilege to have him here,” she says. “His humility touches my heart. Money can’t buy joy like this. He got his hands dirty planting with us. That brings real happiness to Brazilians.”
On the boat ride, William spots fishermen with nets on wooden poles. He stops the engine for a quick chat about their daily catch. Back on Paquetá, Glaucia Martinez, a retired lawyer aged 60, can’t stop touching his hand as they talk. “I told him the island feels safe and charming,” she recalls. “Good, honest people live in peace here. Oh, and I said I love Kate!”
The adventure continues in Rio at a United for Wildlife summit. There, William steps up to speak and launches his big plan: “protect the protectors.” He paints a grim picture of environmental crime hitting hard in the Amazon. “For indigenous communities, losing forests means losing everything – their homes, sacred spots, even lives,” he explains.
He calls them true leaders with smart fixes. “They don’t just live in the forest. They defend it.” But danger lurks. Criminals target anyone in their way. In Latin America alone, 120 protectors died or vanished in 2024. “These aren’t cold numbers,” William stresses. “These are brave souls risking all for the land we all need. We can’t save forests if fear rules their lives.”
He unveils a fresh partnership. His Royal Foundation joins forces with the Coordination of Indigenous Organisations of the Brazilian Amazon and The Podaali Fund. Together, they offer legal help, emergency cash, and campaigns to spotlight the risks.
“This work follows indigenous lead,” he promises. “It runs through their own systems and zeros in on the most vulnerable – isolated groups, women leaders, folks near borders.” He urges everyone to act, not just talk. “We celebrate these guardians with real support. Side by side, we shield those saving our planet’s heart.”
Later this week, William heads to the Cop30 climate talks in Belem. World leaders await, and he speaks for King Charles and the British Government. The whole trip spotlights how everyday people in Brazil guard ancient lands and rebuild broken habitats.
Think about those mangroves. One small tree planted by a prince today grows tall tomorrow, cleaning water, housing fish, fighting floods. Multiply that by millions of actions from locals worldwide, and hope blooms.
William’s visit sparks joy on Paquetá. Kids chatter about the prince for weeks. Guardians feel seen and stronger. Fishermen share stories of the royal chat. And back home, Brits hear how their future king gets muddy for the greater good.
The Earthshot Prize shines a light on big inventions, but boots-on-the-ground efforts like this win the real battles. Indigenous wisdom meets modern support. Threats shrink when the world watches and helps.
Prince William leaves Brazil with muddy hands and a full heart. He proves royals can connect, listen, and lend a hand – no throne required. From a baby’s giggle to a guardian’s grin, human bonds build the strongest shields for nature.
As the boat pulls away from Paquetá, locals wave goodbye. The prince waves back, already planning his next move to back the brave. The fight for our planet gains a powerful friend, one tree, one handshake, one story at a time.
Brazil buzzes with the news. The Amazon’s defenders stand taller. And somewhere, a new mangrove pushes roots into the earth, ready to grow.

























































































