Queen’s granddaughter Zara Tindall gives birth at home

Her husband, Mike Tindall, who led the English rugby team, announced the birth during an episode of his podcast, “The Good, The Bad and The Rugby”, published on Wednesday.

The baby was born on the bathroom floor of his house at around 6 pm, after he “arrived very quickly”.

“It was running to the gym, picking up a mat, going into the bathroom, putting the mat on the floor, dropped towels, brace, brace, brace,” said Tindall.

Zara Tindall is the daughter of Princess Anne, the second daughter of the Queen and cousin of Princes William and Harry. The arrival is the tenth great-grandson of the monarch and the twenty-second in the line of succession to the throne.

The baby, named Lucas Philip, weighed 3.6 kg at birth, a spokesman for the couple told CNN.

The couple’s other two children, Mia Grace and Lena Elizabeth, were not at home on Sunday for the newcomer, but have seen him since and are “in the clouds,” said Mike Tindall.

The midwife, who was supposed to meet them at the hospital, entered the scene quickly because she was not far, and a second came “when the head arrived”, he added.

Zara is feeling healthy, he said, and went for a walk with the baby.

“She was a warrior, as always, they always are,” said Tindall. “We can never judge a woman in terms of what she went through in childbirth.”

He said there are advantages to giving birth at home. After Lucas arrived, Tindall watched an old game of rugby and some golf with his new son.

Zara Tindall is a talented equestrian, having won the silver medal in a team event at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

She met her future husband during the 2003 Rugby World Cup, when he was playing for England. The couple married in Edinburgh in 2011.

Amy Cassidy of CNN contributed to this report.

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