Surprise —King CharlesandQueen Camillaare abroad!

On Wednesday afternoon, the King and Queen stepped out in Belfast for their historic first visit to Northern Ireland since theircoronationon May 6. The trip is also the King and Queen’s first official visit out of England since the crowning ceremony. The royal couple was all smiles when they arrived at Hazelbank Park in Newtownabbey to open the new Coronation Garden, created to celebrate their crowning and mark the start of a new green initiative for the community.

King Charles, 74, and Queen Camilla, 75, had the honor of opening the gates and met designers behind the new space, landscaped with the same sustainable principles the King and Queen employ.

Queen Camilla and King Charles.Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Diarmuid Gavin speaks with King Charles III and Queen Camilla during a visit to open the new Coronation Garden on day one of their two-day visit to Northern Ireland

Chris Jackson/Getty Images

“They were wonderful – I got to spend a little bit of time with them, we went into the quiet garden with the water dancing and they were asking me where the plants came from, the idea behind the design, and they couldn’t have been nicer,” garden designer Diarmuid Gavin toldThe Independentof his time with Charles and Camilla, who are known to share a love of gardening and country life.

King Charles and Queen Camilla.Chris Jackson/Getty Images

King Charles III and Queen Camilla during a visit to open the new Coronation Garden on day one of their two-day visit to Northern Ireland

The royals checked out the garden from the pavilion balcony, bright with Irish wildflowers, topiary and conical trees. Then, they met with school children participating in coronation-themed projects, community volunteers who pitched in duringThe Big Help Outas well as recipients of The Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service, The King’s Award for Enterprise and The Duke of Edinburgh Bursary.

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King Charles III and Queen Camilla cut a cake during a visit to open the new Coronation Garden

The King and Queen couldn’t help but laugh during their final duty — cutting into a crown-shaped cake! The decadent confection looked like the historicSt. Edward Crown, which the Archbishop of Canterbury used to crown Charles on May 6.

King Charles.Mark Marlow/PA Images via Getty Images

King Charles III meets with children from Whitehouse Primary school as he opens a new Coronation Garden in Newtownabbey

Mark Marlow/PA Images via Getty Images

Queen Camilla.Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Queen Camilla greets the crowd after a visit to open the new Coronation Garden on day one of their two-day visit to Northern Ireland

The King and Queen then traveled to Hillsborough Castle, where they were guests of honor at a garden party. They met attendees making a difference in their communities through volunteer and charity work and chatted with students from Blythefield Primary School, who are among the winners of Historic Royal Palaces’ Coronation Benches competition.

The contest invited school children across the U.K. to design benches for installation around Historic Royal Palace grounds to commemorate the May 6 crowning ceremony. In another playful nod to the crowning ceremony, King Charles and Queen Camilla sat on a throne-style bench, hand painted with the crown jewels.

Queen Camilla and King Charles.Brian Lawless/PA Images via Getty Images

King Charles III and Queen Camilla take a seat on a bench designed by pupils from Belfast’s Blythefield Primary School who have taken part in Historic Royal Palaces' competition to design Coronation benches at Hillsborough Castle

Brian Lawless/PA Images via Getty Images

The pair parted ways, as Charles met with the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and Camilla mingled with Coronation Champion volunteers. They came back together to plant a magnolia tree in the garden of Hillsborough Castle to commemorate their coronation, just likeQueen Elizabethdid in Northern Ireland in 1953.

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King Charles.Tim Rooke - Pool/Getty Images

King Charles III and Queen Camilla plant a tree at Hillsborough Castle to mark Their Majesties' Coronation

Tim Rooke - Pool/Getty Images

In honor of Charles’ crowning ceremony, PEOPLE published aspecial issuedevoted to theepic festivities, the King and his life.

“I think it’s something that dawns on you with the most ghastly, inexorable sense,” a 20-year-old Charles told BBC radio in 1969 of recognizing his destiny. “I didn’t suddenly wake up in my pram one day and say, ‘Yippee.’ But I think it just dawns on you, you know, slowly, that people are interested in one, and slowly you get the idea that you have a certain duty and responsibility.”

source: people.com