Lockdown or lockup?

Lockin or lockout? While many people through choice or health are not going out at all, for me it feels like lockout since when lockdown was announced, all but essential businesses are closed. For me,Okumaya devam et
Break for the border: Southwark

Once April is out, the number of new corona cases in the UK has peaked for now and in London, a week or two earlier. Face to face contact is still limited to 2-minute doorstep conversations withOkumaya devam et
Bright light, big city

Confinement of course mines a rich seam in films and literature. "The Birdman of Alcatraz" was on TV recently, also "The Martian" featuring Matt Damon's unscheduled solitude on the Red Planet. And inOkumaya devam et
Drink out to help out

Today is a landmark in which restaurants and pubs are to re-open---for the moment; there are warnings of a possible trade-off later to allow the schools to open fully at the expense of hospitality. MyOkumaya devam et
The Deep South

For the first time since lockdown, a morning fry-up at the Portuguese cafe near Kennington Cross. Baked beans with tinned tomatoes are not everyone's thing but they are mine. And the hash browns ofOkumaya devam et
Eastern promise

It's the height of the holiday season and millions of people are hoping to get abroad. The rules on "air bridges" are specific to each country and while some places (Thailand for example) are doingOkumaya devam et
Downstream South Bank

South Bank refers to the lively area around the Royal Festival Hall in Waterloo but it could just as well apply to another vibrant area downstream on the Greenwich Peninsula. It used to be, and inOkumaya devam et
Amy and David

The good weather is having a final fling as I head on a 59 bus to Euston and north to Camden Town. This was the home of Amy Winehouse---with her best looking-for-trouble face here---who died in 2011.Okumaya devam et
My South Bank

Living as I do, close to London's South Bank, I've become quite possessive about it. The arc between Westminster and Blackfriars Bridges is the most familiar, with the Royal Festival Hall and otherOkumaya devam et
Autumn colours

Lockdown 2.0 is upon us, provisionally for 4 weeks until early December. With the rising infection rate over September and October, it's not exactly surprising. Restaurants, pubs and coffee shops areOkumaya devam et
London: Christmas past

And now for something completely different. These oldies were taken in 1972 and 73 with a medium-format Rolleiflex---which I still have. The black and white film brings out the bleakness of theOkumaya devam et
2020 revisited: Mexico comes to London

2020 has finally been binned but the days of fledgling 2021 have been anxious too, with Covid cases rocketing and the hospitals under great pressure. Help is on the way with the Oxford vaccine joiningOkumaya devam et
January brings the snow

January is always a time for reflection on the past and planning for the future. Books are tremendous companions and I have used the hidden walks guide for many finds in forgotten corners of thisOkumaya devam et
Green shoots, yellow blooms

We are almost in full circle and the seasons pass with proud unconcern for lockups and lockdowns. Earlier in the month we had what was dubbed (why do people only write "dubbed" but never say it?) theOkumaya devam et
The year round, round the Shard

It's been a full year since my return from Mexico, and quite an extraordinary one. Lockups, lockdowns.....spring is arriving and with it, some hope that the plague that has impacted so many people andOkumaya devam et
Onwards and eastwards

Back to east London and forward into year 2 since the last stamp in my passport. But in this shrunken world, London continues to be fascinating, in fact delightful. The days lengthen as March advancesOkumaya devam et
Lives remembered

Something remarkable is happening on the South Bank. On the wall underneath St. Thomas's Hospital, scene of many Covid patients including the prime minister this time last year, thousands of heartsOkumaya devam et
Secret gardens

A year since I began with some gardens around Lambeth and Southwark; now I'm over the river in Kensington. SW7 has royal connections with the Albert Hall and nearby Memorial, plus KP (KensingtonOkumaya devam et
Spring surprise

However indifferent or downright bad the news may be, spring never fails to return to us. March was a fairly chilly month but the daffodils were out early. This first image comes from Albert Square:Okumaya devam et
Crawling the Bermondsey Mile

It's common for the weather to be awful for a long weekend---it was rubbish on the first May bank holiday---but at last the sun has chosen to do us a favour. Since mid-May it has been permitted forOkumaya devam et
First time on the canal

The Thames isn't the only waterway that adds presence and beauty to London; there's also the Regent's Canal which snakes a more northerly route. It links the Grand Union Canal with docklandsOkumaya devam et
Regent's Canal: that was then

This is by far from being my first walk along the canal. I first got to know it in the 1970s, having found my first post-graduation job (which I hated) in London. Weekdays involved the daily trudgeOkumaya devam et
Regent's Canal: if this is Thursday.....

......I must be in Little Venice, again. The beautiful early summer weather continues and it's time to sport a new weapon of choice, a mirrorless Canon camera. Besides having an increased resolutionOkumaya devam et
The Dog and Hedgehog

It could be the name of a pub! These pictures were all taken within 10 minutes of my flat and go to show that while I miss long-haul travelling hugely, it's still possible to spot curiosities on one'sOkumaya devam et
In the long run..........

It's been a long time---30 months in fact---since the last London Marathon. It's also the 40th anniversary of the first such event. Starting in Greenwich, the route winds through south-east London,Okumaya devam et