Prince William and new bride Princess Catherine arrived in Canada yesterday for their international debut as Britain’s royal golden couple, hoping star power will win sceptical Canadians over to the monarchy.

William and Kate, her dark hair blowing in the wind, stepped off the plane under overcast skies to be greeted by dignitaries before rushing off to their first official engagement on foreign soil.

Thousands desperate to glimpse the 29-year-old newlyweds lined the streets of Ottawa ahead of a wreath-laying ceremony at a World War I memorial.

While Prince William has plenty of experience of royal duties, his wife – known until recently as Kate Middleton – is still a rookie in the public eye.

At the start of the nine-day tour of the key British Commonwealth nation, Princess Catherine was to have an immediate chance to show she had learnt the ropes, meeting and greeting the gathering throng after the ceremony.

Prince William’s great-grandparents King George VI and Queen Elizabeth unveiled the memorial in 1939 and established a new tradition with the first royal walkabout, stopping to chat with some in the 100,000-strong crowd.

Full of pomp and ceremony, the trip comes just two months after a radiant Kate Middleton walked down the aisle in the wedding-of-the-year, watched by an estimated two billion people worldwide.

“It’s symbolic that Canada is the first place they have chosen to visit,” said Dave Sencial, who had come all the way from Canada’s easternmost Newfoundland province to see the royal couple.

Canadian fans packed every hotel in sight of the capital. Some even camped overnight on the steps of the war memorial, awakened by Canada’s national anthem blared from nearby Parliament Hill where technicians readied sound and stage equipment for today’s Canada Day celebrations.

Support for the monarchy hovers above 50 per cent in Canada and has risen from last year since the royal nuptials, although there is still a vocal anti-monarchist minority.

In addition to official pageantry and military ceremonies, the schedule of the royal visit has its lighter moments, such as a cooking class, an aboriginal sports event and a rodeo.

The initiation for the British royal family’s newest member, also known as the Duchess of Cambridge, will be vital training for the future queen in the cauldron-like atmosphere of public walkabouts.

Their first day will kick off with military honours as well as speeches by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Governor General David Johnston and Prince William himself.

Later, the royals were attending a barbecue with 120 young Canadians at the official residence of the British governor general, Rideau Hall, originally the home of a Scottish stonemason.

Today, they cap off their visit to Ottawa celebrating Canada’s national holiday, joining tens of thousands outside Parliament for musical performances and fireworks.

After taking a cooking class in Montreal on July 2, William and Catherine will travel to Quebec City, Charlottetown, Yellowknife and Calgary.

Prior to their final stop in Canada, the newlyweds, who honeymooned in May in the Seychelles, were expected to sneak away on a romantic getaway to a secluded and undisclosed location in the Rocky Mountains for a day and night.

Their tour of Canada coincides with a grim milestone – today would have been the 50th birthday of Princess Diana, Prince William’s mother, who was thronged by fans when she made her own visit to Canada in 1983.

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