Will And Kate To Witness Rare, One-In-A-Hundred Natural Phenomenon, Because Of Course They're That Lucky

OF COURSE THEY GET TO DO THIS

As they continue their tour of Australia tomorrow, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will see rain waterfall-ing off Uluru, a sacred rock formation in the central part of the continent.

The rock is always in the same place, obviously. But these otherworldly, silver-toned streams of rainwater are caused by such rare climatic circumstances that only one percent of visitors ever get to see them.

And of course Will and Kate are in that one percent.

waterfall uluru

waterfall uluru

waterfall uluru

waterfall uluru

Uluru (also called Ayers Rock) is a sacred site for Australia's Aboriginal people, and there are cave paintings on the rock that date to ancient times. The national park is world-famous for epic sunsets, like the one Princess Diana and Prince Charles might have seen when they visited the site just over 30 years ago.

And as if having a marsupial named after their son at an Australian zoo wasn't already enough, Will and Kate will have their own tour of striking Uluru tomorrow.

You can hike through rock caves and go glamping near Uluru, but the royal duo will reportedly stick to "a short walk along the base" and a spot of tea.

"I hope they go away thinking they've never seen such an amazing area," park ranger Kerrie Bennison told Australia's ABC News.

We're sure these two will think Uluru is royally gorgeous.

uluru sunset

uluru

Before You Go

The Duke And Duchess Of Cambridge Tour Australia And New Zealand - Day 14

Kate Middleton And Prince William Tour Australia And New Zealand

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