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It was a royal procession complete with horses and princes - but like no parade you'd ever see on the Mall.
Harry and William were yesterday swaddled in blankets and woolly hats for a ride to a mountain village in Africa.
Escorted by villagers on ponies, the brothers and Harry's friend Prince Seeiso travelled three miles into the snowcapped mountains of Lesotho to visit schools and orphanages at Semongkong at 8,000ft.
Their grey knitted blankets, like those worn by local Basotho herdsmen, bore messages of thanks to the brothers.
Just like their mother Diana before them, the pair weren't afraid to get up close and personal with their new friends. Harry took two-year-old orphan Bokang Rapostane on his knee as they watched a play about Aids and HIV, which affects around 23 per cent of adults in Lesotho.
Harry, who was demonstrating the work of his charity Sentebale, said: 'This was a fantastic chance to show William what Sentebale is all about - the vulnerable children. I'm just happy to have him here with me.'
The princes later played a football match with orphaned teenage girls from Semongkong Children's Centre.
Their competitive streak came through, as Harry said he was 'really looking forward to slide tackling William', before the kick-around. The match ended 1-0 to Harry's team.
Later, they revealed their dreams for the future while playing a game with HIV-positive children in the Lesotho capital of Maseru.
Writing around outlines of their own bodies, Harry said he wanted to live in Africa and be a professional surfer, wildlife photographer and helicopter pilot - which he is already well on the way to achieving after passing exams to fly an Apache.
William said he wanted to be 'happy, lucky, strong, caring and a successful pilot', while saying that his key attribute was being 'less ginger' than Harry.
Harry retorted by writing 'loser' on his brother's paper.
The princes are travelling to Cape Town today to support England's World Cup efforts.
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source: dailymail