Our trip from Oxford to London was easy and fast. We checked into our unit in Bayswater and I headed out (reporting a few Issues to reception en route. Full disparaging reviews can be seen on both booking.com and Tripadvisor). Once I figured out how to read the tube diagrams I was very excited to meet up with a few good friends - with a posh tea for the first of us to arrive, then off to a nearby pub so the after-work crowd could drop in and out. Matt managed to find us a bit later and afterwards Bettina walked us to the tube as we admired the sunset view of London from the southbank.
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What a sunset! |
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Jolly big ferris wheel! |
We were so pleased that that sun had come to London with us and decided for our first full day to take a ferry to Greenwich. The trip up river showed us our first sight of many of London's most iconic places and once we alighted our first stop was the meridian point where traditional photos with one foot in the east and one in the west were taken.
We went through the free sections of the observatory, admiring the equatorial telescope and the early timepieces.
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Statue honouring Yuri Gagarin, the first human in space. |
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A visit to the Maritime Museum was next on the agenda where I admired Nelson's uniform, complete with bullet holes and blood stains. Matt considers this an unhealthy obsession, I wondered what was unhealthy about being ghoulish? I also liked the ship's figureheads collection.
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High tide near the river. Not a flood. |
Heather
had suggested a visit to the Trafalgar Hotel to round out our visit
and it was certainly a pub with a wonderful view (we were amused to see
the same things on a Michael Portillo TV show within hours of us getting
home!). Sitting there certainly made us realise just how enormous and
powerful the tides of the Thames. As you can see from the photos above
of the Tower from our ferry trip, where sandy (muddy?) beaches were,
the water was now several metres deep.
We also took the time to admire the Cutty Sark but not enough time remained in their opening hours
to spend the
quite large amounts of tea (maybe gin or beer) money they wanted to see over her!
I decided the next day was to be a little more bookish and we started with a walk through the nearby Kensington Gardens until we reached the Peter Pan statue. I may have "issues" with the story as an adult but I did love that old movie as a kid, so Second Star to the Right and Straight on 'Till Morning it Was (leaving feminist and colonial issues aside for now). I also like the fact the profits still go to the renowned Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital (but not all of them, see http://www.gosh.org/about-us/peter-pan/faqs for further information).
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If you think your dog or cat has a cold wet nose just wait till a
BEAR sticks its nose in your ear! ;-) |
Once we'd had our walk in the park it was off to the station. Paddington Station to meet a young refugee from Peru.
We also took the time to visit the home of one of the greatest minds in all of history, however, the queue was so long to go in we decided to skip the museum and head off to our next stop.
After a morning of visiting book locations we were looking forward to meeting with Heather and admiring the view from the Shard. You can go up to the top viewing plataform for a moderately extortionate sum to admire the view - or you can cross your fingers that you are well enough dressed and go to the Shard bar for an overpriced drink and the same view. Guess which option we selected!
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Loo with a view. This is what the ladies see when washing their hands. |
But our day wasn't yet over! More excitements were to come as we walked along the riverbank to meet up with a few more friends, Nicky and Shirley (somehow these friends escaped having photographic evidence but I believe there were some Pimms Cocktails involved). On the way we got to go over the Golden Hind and saw the New Globe. I can't express in a brief blog post just how exciting London was, how much we saw (and how much we didn't have time to fit in seeing).
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The Golden Hind. Checking a few details for this post I was
GUTTED to discover this was a replica ship. |
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Detail near the Nav. station on the rotten replica. |
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Remains of the Rose Window in Winchester Palace ruins |
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Late at night we found some food trucks
Mmmmm Hot Diggity Dogs! | |
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I was lucky enough to have been gifted a trip on the London Eye so the next day I left Matt to his fate and joined the long long queue. Did I mention that the queue for the view was very very long? I did see some wonderful sights from up high.
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From street level all you see here is a wall! |
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Our final afternoon in London involved a few museum visits. We SAID we'd only spend half an hour in each of the V&A and the Natural History Museum but naturally we were there until we were chucked out. I thought the instructions in the V&A on how to build your own nuclear bomb shelter were a timely reminder.
Naturally, my favourite section was the fashion room although we also found the Cast Courts really interesting. They are plaster models of statues that were made fashionable in the 18th century. These days they are used as reference when the originals - damaged by time, war, pollution, and just old age - are being restored.
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ultimate waist training! |
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I wonder what he's wondering? |
Over the road at the Natural History Museum we visited the dinosaurs and the famous blue whale skeleton.
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we couldn't go past the dinosaurs. |
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Some of them quite big.
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So enormous, the blue whale skeleton is over 25 metres long! |
It was a great end to a wonderful holiday and we spent much of our long flight home wondering how soon we could do it all again (when I wasn't binge watching the entire season one of Riverdale). Obviously our blog has been very much a "best bits (or best disasters)" but overwhelmingly we had a great time, ate food that went from barely recognisable to amazing, and met some wonderful people. Would we do it again? Like a shot!
1 comment:
Loved your final blog.
It has been wonderful reading about your adventures in so many different places. You have succeeded in finding many quirky places along with the "must see" spots.
We look forward to reading about your next adventures.
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