Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s new struggle with neighbours at $14m Montecito mansion

 

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle purchased a home in one of the most exclusive areas of California, but they couldn’t have foreseen the hidden problems that would hit them years later.

 

Mansion

The couple live in a sprawling $14.5 million mansion in Montecito with their two children Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet. While the interior features seven bedrooms, thirteen and a half bathrooms and a home gym, decked out in a blend of minimalistic, Scandi and classic Mediterranean accents, the exterior is perhaps even more impressive with a chicken coop, a swimming pool and a playhouse for their kids.

But they may only be able to enjoy the latter features by navigating a displeasing aroma wafting over from a neighbouring farm. The downfall of being in a private area surrounded by countryside is that you don’t know exactly what will be on those farms. In the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s case, they live a mere 10 minutes from a cannabis farm, according to the DailyMail.

Cannabis is legal in 38 states for medical use and 24 states for recreational use, and California falls into the latter category. That means their neighbours can grow the plants on an “industrial scale” which, although profitable, can cause an overwhelmingly powerful smell.

Harry and Meghan will not be the only ones who may be affected by the stench; their Santa Barbara neighbours include Oprah Winfrey, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom.

Harry’s candid confessions
Prince Harry has previously admitted to experimenting with drugs, even smoking weed after his first date with Meghan in 2016.

After enjoying drinks with the American actress at Soho House 76 Dean Street, Meghan left because she had dinner plans and Harry visited a friend who lived off the King’s Road in Chelsea.

In his book Spare, he admitted: “He took one look at my face and said: ‘What’s happened?’ I didn’t want to tell him. I kept thinking: Do not tell him. Do not tell him. Do not tell him. I told him. I recounted the entire date, then pleaded: ‘[Expletive] mate, what am I going to do?’