Health

How are Queen Elizabeth II’s corgis doing? Daughter-in-law Sarah Ferguson shares an update

The queen left behind Muick and Sandy, who were seen during the televised funeral procession waiting on the Windsor Palace grounds for the coffin to reach before its interment.

Since then, there was no particular update about their well-being until now. According to an Independent report, Sarah Ferguson, who is the queen’s daughter-in-law and the ex-wife of her third child Prince Andrew, recently revealed that the dogs are doing well and are taken care of.

Following the monarch’s death, Prince Andrew inherited the dogs along with Ferguson. The Duchess of York said during a recent interview with The Telegraph that it was a “big honour” to bring the two puppers into her home, and that they are “national treasures” who have been “taught well”.

Quoting the duchess, the publication said that the corgis have adjusted to living with Ferguson and Prince Andrew, along with their five Norfolk terriers at their royal residence in Royal Lodge, Windsor.
“They all balance out, the carpet moves as I move but I’ve got used to it now,” she joked, adding that Sandy and Muick brought “constant joy” to the queen’s life.

In her lifetime, the late monarch reportedly bred 14 generations of corgis, famously declaring, “My corgis are family.”

Shortly after her death, it was announced that the Duke of York and his ex-wife would take on the puppers. The queen, however, also left behind one dorgi — a corgi-dachshund mix — but it is not known as to where that animal is.
According to reports, Andrew — who is no longer a working royal — gifted his mother Muick, and later Sandy, as a gift for her 95th birthday last year.
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