The Duchess of Cambridge couldn’t stop grinning after being given the opportunity to feed a young rhino and an elephant calf at an animal sanctuary in India.
Kate and William had a lot of fun playing the parents of a group of endangered animals who were hurt or lost in the wild and are now being cared for.

Kate, on the other hand, revealed that she was ‘badly missing’ after a four-day vacation, adding that Prince George was ‘too mischievous’ to bring on the trip since the two-year-old ‘would be running around in circles.’
She also stated the tiny girls dancing about the town reminded her of 11-month-old Princess Charlotte and promised the elders, “We’ll surely bring them along the next time we visit.”

At Kaziranga’s Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation, the Duchess of Cambridge laughs as she feeds a young elephant.
Kate, an animal doctor, nurses a newborn elephant back to health in a sanctuary that cares for creatures that have been wounded, displaced, or orphaned.

Kate also took care of a baby rhino at the Kaziranga Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation in Assam.

Kate gets the runaround from a newborn rhino at the Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation in Kaziranga’s Panbari reserve forest.

Prince William even tries his hand at nursing the calves, using a special bottle to feed them milk.

Wild animals that have been hurt, lost, or left alone in their natural habitat can get emergency care and get better at the refuge.
The couple were in Kaziranga National Park, which is home to elephants, water buffalo, rare swamp deer, tigers, and two-thirds of the world’s Indian one-horned rhinos.
The park, located in the northeastern Indian state of Assam, is a one-of-a-kind blend of grasslands, marshes, and forests that spans over 800,000 square kilometers and has been named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

William is very concerned about the environment, so he and Kate went to the Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation (CWRC) to meet the baby animals.
It helps injured, lost, or orphaned animals get the care they need and get back on their feet.
The cubs had gathered in an area with open grassland and open woods, under the shelter of trees, to wait for the king and queen.
The Cambridges’ maternal instincts came to the fore during the meeting, since they had left their two children at home before traveling on a tour to India.

The Duke of Cambridge (left) cracks a coconut on a rock, while Kate walks with Elephant Family CEO Ruth Powys (right) during a visit to the Mark Shand Foundation in Kaziranga National Park.