Prince Charles plays DJ on the turntables in Toronto

On his latest trip to Canada, Prince Charles stopped in Toronto to pick up a few skills that every prince should have: How to drop a beat like only the Prince of Wales can.

To celebrate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, royal couple Prince Charles and Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, embarked on a three-day trip to Canada, making stops in New Brunswick, Ontario and Saskatchewan.

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While in Toronto, the Prince visited the Yonge Street Mission, an establishment created by his great-grandmother Queen Victoria, and stopped by UforChange, an organization that encourages a "creative culture" in low-income Canadian youth.

As part of his visit to UforChange, His Royal Highness donned a pair of headphones as he learned to scratch and fade like a pro during a workshop with young musicians and looked pretty intense as he spun the vinyl and worked on his DJ swagger.

Before the Prince got his royal groove on, he visited Toronto's Ryerson University's digital media zone and looked at new technology created by student entrepreneurs.

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According to The Canadian Press, the Prince of Wales "seemed particularly impressed" after he was greeted by a robot that said, "Hello, Your Royal Highness," and bowed before him.

The royal couple departed for Regina, Saskatchewan, last night by way of Toronto's Pearson International Airport thus concluding the Prince's sixteenth trip to Toronto and Camilla's second.

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