LONDON - draw a line on an overseas immediate honey Moon and opting instead for a quiet weekend at secret UK location, Prince William and Kate Middleton was clear Saturday, they want to carve out a space for themselves.
This struggle for privacy is crucial if they want to avoid be hounded as mother of William, the late Princess Diana, whose every move was to tail.
Royal honeymooners started the day by asking the media not to meddle in the end of the week and to leave them alone when they eventually begin honeymoon. Separately, representatives of the Palace has also asked the media not to reveal where the couple lives near the base of Royal Air Force of William Wales.
He will return to military it as a helicopter pilot rescue after the weekend of the Festival, which ends Monday.
The application of the privacy is in striking contrast to their accessibility to the public in the two previous days. On the eve of the marriage of Friday at Westminster Abbey, William hosted crowds in the streets outside his official residence in an impromptu gesture.
The royal couple dazzled as the masses on their wedding day with a ride in horse-drawn carriage open at the top of the Abbey of Westminster at Buckingham Palace and a pair of kisses on a balcony of the Palace. Also, they appeared in the doors of the Palace with the prince of Aston Martin driving his father, who had balloons in the back and a licence plate "Just the sea".
William and Middleton, who have the title of Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge, now seem determined not to let the paparazzi armed with enlarged long cameras to make it impossible for them to go about their business without constantly feeling that they are harassed.
The couple walk hand in hand on the grounds of Buckingham Palace, onboard a helicopter Saturday morning for a secret location, and then issued a statement asking to be left alone.
"The couple asked that their privacy is respected during next weekend and during their wedding trip," according to a message posted on the official website of royal marriage.
Previously, officials have said that William had planned two weeks leave of his military duties in the indications that the honeymoon period will begin a day or two after the marriage. But the couple said on the website that they would honeymoon overseas at a later date.
The ultimate destination remains a closely guarded secret although a number of idyllic places mentioned. German media, who were not confirmed, reports suggested that the couple planned to spend the honeymoon to a small island to the Seychelles.
The reports were based on the comments to a German real estate agent who claimed to have leased the island to the British Royal family.
Privacy has long been the main concern of the couple while planning honeymoon. It is believed he considered of private islands in the Caribbean - although photographers boats could theoretically get photos of their cavorting on a beach - and sanctuaries in Africa, where William has traveled in the past.
Another option, they can use this weekend, one is Balmoral Estate of Queen Elizabeth II in Scotland, which contains large remote areas where the couple would be probably left alone.
But the desire for privacy - something they enjoyed during their days of the University because that usually voracious British media agreed to give the young prince space - can become a dominant theme of their marriage, especially with the interest generated by their glamorous marriage worldwide.
The BBC said 17.5 million viewers watched Kate Middleton arrive at Westminster Abbey in her wedding dress. Sky News said 661,000 viewers watched his entry, and about a million connected to their Web site. Millions more watching around the world, and the wedding images will be reprinted years.
Certainly, the Middletons and the Royal family appeared to send a clear signal that the marriage was certainly more. Parents of Middleton, his brother and sister left their hotel in London, in the afternoon smiled and waved to photographers waiting and then taken to their home in Bucklebury, about 50 miles (80 km) West of London.
Royal commentator Dickie arbitrator said that the couple is likely to be able to live a normal life when they return to the area around the military base in the North of the country of Wales where William is based.
"They have been left alone y in the past and there is no reason that they are not left alone there now,"he says. ".
Arbitrator said that it will be relatively easy for the staff of the prince, who has broad experience in security and logistics, to implement the honeymoon period so that the couple should not be changed. The honeymoon period is supposed to be shorter than that of the parents of William, Prince Charles and Diana, which combines a Mediterranean of two weeks of cruise with several long breaks in Britain.
William and Middleton, celebrated their marriage in style Friday night and Saturday morning with part of dinner and dancing at Buckingham Palace, hosted by Charles. Middleton was a second dress designed by Sarah Burton of the House of Alexander McQueen fashion, while William door is a tuxedo.
Among the invited eminent, whose sister Pippa Middleton and sometimes girlfriend of Prince Harry, Chelsy Davy, returns to their rooms at the Goring hotel to 3 hours of the morning Saturday as the celebrations of the Palace of the wounded to the bottom.
Harry had announced its intention to make a breakfast of "FRY" early in the morning to anyone with the constitution to stay awake at night, but it is not known how many hungry revellers it fed.
No there was no apprehension on their silence to avoid waking up grandma - Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip had left the Palace for children and retreated to another Royal residence.
The often contentious British media delivered on the day of marriage an unqualified success, special editions remember filling with dozens of photos of a day which saw approximately 1 million people urge London parks and streets to celebrate.
Bouquet bridal of Middleton was laid on the tomb of the unknown Warrior - a Memorial in Westminster Abbey which holds the remains of a soldier killed in World War II which is today a memorial for all the deaths in the war.
The mother of Queen Elizabeth II, the late Queen Mother, began the tradition of Royal on the Tomb bridal bouquets-laying when she left her own bouquet it after her marriage to the Duke of York, future George VI in 1923.
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