There is a new cousin joining the Cambridge family. The third child that Pippa Middleton, Kate Middleton's younger sister,
reportedly received with husband James Matthews would make the Middleton family's playdates more busier.
Pippa and James Matthews' newest kid reportedly arrived a few weeks ago, though the couple has not yet made an official announcement about the birth of their child.
Which is not entirely unexpected given that Pippa opted not to publicly announce her third pregnancy but
instead simply showed up for the Platinum Party to celebrate Queen Elizabeth's Platinum Jubilee with a visible baby tummy.
Since it had only been a little over a month, she was only a few weeks away from giving birth.
A second baby girl was allegedly delivered to the couple, who already had a 1-year-old daughter named Grace and a 3-year-old son named Arthur.
The magazine claims that Pippa, like her older sister Kate, gave birth to her children in the Lido Wing of London's St. Mary's Hospital.
The three children of the Duchess of Cambridge, Prince George, 8, Princess Charlotte, 7, and Prince Louis, 4, make up Carole and Michael Middleton's sixth grandchild.
These cousins will be able to spend a lot of time together because the recentlyweds, who have three children,
are supposedly planning a significant move as a family of five in the near future.
They plan to move to Berkshire to be closer to Carole and Michael Middleton's ancestral home at Bucklebury Manor, according to The Daily Mail.
They would be 50 minutes away from Adelaide Cottage in Windsor, where Prince William and Kate want to move this summer to be closer to the 96-year-old Queen Elizabeth.
Although there is not a lot of information available regarding the newest Middleton family member,
we do know that Pippa is susceptible to homoeopathic treatment for infants.
After the birth of big brother Arthur in 2018, Pippa shared in Waitrose Weekend magazine how she employed cranial osteopathy to aid her child's sleep.
I overheard a couple mothers discussing visiting a cranial osteopath shortly after Arthur was born last year,
the woman remembered. For newborns, it is a well-liked alternative therapy,
especially for those who had a challenging birth, are unsettled, or have trouble falling asleep.