Prince William and Kate Middleton are likely to stay at Anmer Hall and resume their children’s home education after England was plunged into Lockdown 3.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge had previously spent time at their Norfolk residence, where they stayed for Christmas.
Prince George, seven, and Princess Charlotte, five, were due to return to their school, Thomas’ Battersea, on January 6.
However, the latest restrictions on coronavirus in England mean that schools are now closed and are not expected to open before the mid-February break, in mid-February.
It is believed that the Cambridges had intended to return to their London base at Kensington Palace, but now they have no reason to return to the capital, and the law recommends against essential travel, Hello! reports.

Prince William and Kate Middleton are likely to stay at Anmer Hall and resume their children’s home education. Prince George, seven, Prince Louis, two, and Princess Charlotte, five (pictured together for a 2020 Christmas book)
It means they will probably enjoy a discreet family holiday there for the Duchess’s 39th birthday on January 9th.
William and Kate, both 38, will have to start home schooling for Princes George and Louis and Princess Charlotte again, as they did during the first blockade in March last year.
Earlier, they admitted that they found it “challenging” to teach their three children – which they said “had such resistance”.
The couple even “continued” the Easter holidays without saying them, Kate admitting: “I feel very bad. Children have such resistance, I do not know how.

It is believed that the Cambridges had intended to return to their London base at Kensington Palace, but now they have no reason to return to the capital, and the law recommends against essential travel. In the photo with their children participating in a special pantomime show at the Palladium Theater in London in December
“Honestly, you get to the end of the day and write down a list of all the things you did that day.”
She added: “It actually has a bit of structure. And it’s great, there are so many great online tips and fun activities you can do with kids, so it wasn’t all hardcore.
An April source claimed that Kate “led” the home education efforts of the older two, while organizing the game daily for two-year-old Louis, while her husband “rolled up his sleeves.” to help.
They added that the duke and duchess found the experience “extremely rewarding”.
In July, William admitted that his patience was tested while home schooling and he struggled to teach math in Year 2.
Speaking to BBC Radio 5Live, that Peter Crouch podcast, which was recorded partly through Zoom and partly at Kensington Palace in March, the heir said: “I found it quite tested, I’m not going to lie, trying to -I keep the children involved in some kind of work, it’s been an interesting few months.
He added: “I learned through home schooling that my patience is much shorter than I thought it was, it was probably the biggest eye opener for me and that my wife has super patience.
“Basically we are a good team session, I come with the children and I try to make them do something and Catherine comes when, honestly, everything went wrong.
“I have to admit I’m a little embarrassed by my math skills, I can’t do math in year 2.”

Prince William revealed that his patience was tested while educating his children at home in the first block and that he tried to teach math in year 2. He is photographed, right, in September 2019 with Princess Charlotte (left), Kate (second left) and Prince George (second right), while royal children attend the first school day of the year
While the Duchess of Cambridge studied mathematics up to level A, William did not pursue the subject from GCSE to Eton.
Royal expert Victoria Arbiter said the couple considered the blockade a “rare gift” because royal children are usually “inevitably denied the privilege of extended time with their parents”.
She commented that the combination of Kate’s focus on early childhood education and Middleton’s “nutritious presence,” along with Prince William’s focus on mental well-being and Windsor traditions, would lead Cambridge children to be the best-suited generation they have. kings. ever known ‘.
Kensington Palace declined to comment on his whereabouts.