United Kingdom
City of Westminster

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    • Day 2

      Ein sportlicher Tag

      February 4, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

      Unser Tag startet heute mit einem Sightseeinglauf. Trotz kleinem Handgepäck hatten wir unsere Laufsachen mitgenommen, da es eines unserer Ziele für den Städtetrip war.

      Von unsere Unterkunft ging es direkt zum London Eye und weiter vorbei am Big Ben, Westminster Abby, Buckingham Palace und Trafalgar Square bevor wir uns am Viktoria Embankment an den Touristen vorbei schlängelten. Am Tower of London ging es dann über die Tower Bridge und über ein Wohnviertel zurück Nachhause. Am Ende zeigte unsere Uhr 15km 👌

      Nach einer Erfrischung und einem leckeren Mittag ging es sportlich weiter.

      Bei ausgelassener und unbeschreiblicher Stimmung der ganzen Fans fasziniert uns das Fußballspiel Millwall gegen Sunderland.
      Herzlichst empfangen wurden wir von trinkfreudigen Engländer, die uns so gleich Sitzplätze anboten (da wir dank Zeitverschiebung den Anpfiff um gut 60 min verpassten 😅)

      Anschließend spazierten wir noch einmal über die Tower Bridge und begaben uns in unseren „Stammmarkt“. Bei Bier, gutem Essen und viel Trubel lauschten wir noch einer guten Band, tanzten bis in die Nacht und beendeten den Abend mit vielen tollen Eindrücken!
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    • Day 3

      Rund um den großen Ben

      February 7 in England ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

      Nach leckerem Frühstück sind wir zum Big Ben gefahren, um ihn auch bei Tageslicht zu sehen. Der gesamte Westminster und Big Ben ist wirklich sehr beeindruckend. Dort sind wir um die Straßen geschlendert und sind durch einen Park voller verrückter Vögel und Enten zum Buckingham Palace gekommen. Erst waren wir uns gar nicht sicher, ob er es wirklich ist, weil wir ihn irgendwie viel prunkvoller und größer erwartet hätten bzw. von Bildern kennen. Lag aber vielleicht auch bisschen am schlechten Wetter.
      Nach einer kurzen Big Ben Fotosession sind wir zum Piccadilly Circus gefahren und haben dort noch einen wärmenden Chai Latte getrunken, eine richtig geile, mit Vanille gefüllten Zimtschecke gegessen, waren ein bisschen shoppen und haben dann beim Farmer J. gegessen. 👀
      Eigentlich schon auf dem Heimweg, haben wir noch viele größere und kleine Seitenstraßen und Läden gesehen sowie das belebte hübsche Viertel Soho.
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    • Day 26

      King's Guard

      July 5, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      Today we ventured towards Buckingham Palace for a view of the King's Guard.

      We didn't see the changing of the guard at the entrance to the palace as crowds were huge. However we had been pre warned of the crowds, so instead we went to Wellington Barracks just next door and watched the new Guards forming up and being inspected prior to their short march to the palace to conduct the changing of the guard ceremony.

      We arrived at the exact right time and had a front row view of the whole process.
      We saw the guards, the cavalry and the band. It was a great sight. By the time the inspection was complete and the guards were marching off to Buckingham Palace the crowds behind us were four deep.

      Afterwards we wandered through St James park, getting caught in a rain shower, and got up close to Buckingham Palace.
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    • Day 2

      Stadtrundfahrt

      December 5, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

      Heute bestaunten wir auf einer Stadtrundfahrt weltberühmte Sehenswürdigkeiten wie Westminster Abbey, Houses of Parliament, Tower Bridge, London Eye und Buckingham Palace. Ihre Tour endete im lebhaften Viertel Covent Garden.
      Anschließend eine Bootsfahrt unter der Tower Bridge hindurch zum Tower of London.
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    • Day 15

      Tate Britain, Buckingham e Big Ben

      December 27, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌬 10 °C

      Apesar dos mapas de transportes serem, à 1ª vista, um enorme emaranhado de linhas 🤔 foi fácil chegar ao centro de Londres.

      Começámos o dia no Tate Britain, entre obras extraordinárias de artistas britânicos, ou que vive(ra)m no país. A Patrícia só saiu do transe quando finalmente passámos a porta que dizia ‘exit’.

      Depois fomos passeando em direção às maiores atrações deste lado da cidade - o palácio do rei, o famoso relógio e as casas do parlamento, a catedral, o “olho de Londres” que do alto dos 135 metros nos segue para todo lado no passeio ao longo do Tamisa - e, pelo meio, passámos por uma padaria artesanal e por pequeno supermercado para reabastecermos algumas provisões.

      O sol aqui põe-se às 16h por isso já estava escuro quando voltámos para a nossa Cali.
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    • Day 2

      The Big Ben & William Shakespeare

      July 9, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      Първата ни дестинация втория ден беше The Big Ben 🌟
      Много снимки си направихме, беше много хубав. Наталия каза, че предните месеци много туристи били останали разочаровани, защото около година бил увит в найлони за реставрация, но добре, че спонтанно навреме си организирахме почивката. ☺️ Решихме да не се качваме на London Eye (виенското колело), а само да минем покрай него и да си направим едно селфи.
      След него минахме през улицата на Шерлок Холмс, Backer Street 221 b. Там имаше музей и фен магазин на Шерлок Холмс. Аз си взех малък прототип на неговата цигулка, а Ночко неговите лула и шапка. Наблизо имаше хубави сувенири и накупихме за рода и приятели 😄
      По пътя към открития театър в Лондон, където си бяхме купили билети за представление на Шекспир, имаше една статуя с 2ма прегърнати мъж и жена и с Ночко се опитахме да ги наподобим хихи
      Театърът беше много старинен и целия от дърво. Пиесата беше час и половина и малко ни озори и четиримата със силния английски акцент и хумор, но все пак на местата, където разбирахме, се смяхме и с останалите от публиката 😄 тя приключи късно и се прибрахме след нея вкъщи.
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    • Day 24

      London - a Vigil & a Show

      October 9, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      Jo and Asher had to work on Monday so I was left to my own devices. I travelled to London by train and wandered along Southbank and into Westminster area and near 10 Downing Steet. I had fish and chips for lunch like the good tourist I am, paying a fortune as good tourists do.
      In the late afternoon, I ended up near Downing Street where I found myself in the middle of a vigil by Jews for the Hamas attacks on Israel in the last 48 hours. The gathering started small, but after a couple of hours it has grown to over 5000 people, nearly all of them Jewish, and the whole area of London was blocked off progressively as the police became aware of the huge number of Jews assembling and the huge security risk that represented.
      There was a stage set up and all the most significant Jewish leaders gave passionate speeches, including the Chief Rabbi of London and the Ambassador from Israel. There were also eloquent speeches from ministers and leaders of the British government and opposition, all of whom passionately condemned Hamas as criminals and terrorists and stating categorically that the UK stands with Israel. It was witnessing history to be present. Some of the Jews around me asked me if I was Jewish. They all seemed to know each other.
      I got there strong impression from the way people were dressed and their demeanour that I was rubbing shoulders here with some of Londons most elite and rich citizens. There were concerns that there might be some Palestinian agression towards the crowd, but apart from and few minor scuffles and pro Palestinian people yelling out, it was a peaceful and respectful gathering. At the end of the speeches the crowd all broke out in a moving rendition of Hatikva in Hebrew, the Israeli National Anthem.
      Many of those present knew or were related to some of those killed, injured or abducted two days ago.
      After the speeches and the singing was over, I walked to the area near Tower Bridge to find the theatre where I had booked tickets to the show Guys and Dolls. I had been involved in this musical when I was in year 9 at school and I was keen to see it again. It was an amazing show. It started at 7.30pm and concluded at 10.30pm. I then caught a couple of trains to Godalming and then walked to the flat just after midnight where my adventure for the day ended.
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    • Day 3

      In Westminster Abbey

      June 26, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 66 °F

      “My name is Natalia. I am from Poland, and I am Catholic, but I have not been inside a church for many years. I have grown weary of guitars and green screens. But I have heard of this church, and I think that if I ever find God, it might be in a place like this.”

      We didn’t know how long it would take us to get to Westminster Abbey. After all, we’re over here in Greenwich southeast of the city. So we boarded the tender at 8:30 am for the 11:15 service called “the Sung Mass.” The tender took us to Greenwich pier where we boarded an Uber Clipper water bus. Estimates from folks who had made the trip before ranged from thirty minutes to an hour. We didn’t want to be late. We wanted to be sure to get a seat. After a few false starts caused by a faulty ticket machine, we boarded the boat that took us along the Thames for a tour that equaled any excursion we have ever had in London. We passed the Tower of London, the Globe Theater, the Millennial Bridge. Finally the Elizabeth Tower on the Parliament Building came into view and we heard Big Ben strike ten o’clock.

      “Plenty of time before the worship service,” I told Glenda as we walked through the West Door under a saintly statue of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. An usher met us at the door, and I told him that we were here for the eleven-fifteen “Sung Mass.” He directed us to a row of chairs lining the north wall, where one young woman, maybe in her twenties, sat alone. He said, “Wait here. We will call you into the choir when it’s time for the mass to begin.”

      Glenda smiled and took a seat beside the girl, and I sat down beside my wife. The young woman did not return Glenda’s smile, but looked nervous as she spoke. “My name is Natalia. I am from Poland, and I am Catholic, but I have not been inside a church for many years. I have grown weary of guitars and green screens. But I have heard of this church, and I think that if I ever find God, it might be in a place like this.”

      After forty minutes the usher told us we could go up to the choir where the service would be held. He told us how to access the order of worship for today’s liturgy on our cell phones. About two hundred chairs had been set up on each side of the crossing, so that all of us worshippers were facing inward toward a lighted candle on a table. I was on the fourth row of the south transept, so that I could literally reach out my right arm and touch the lectern from which the lessons were read. When it was about time to start, less than four hundred people were present. We should not have worried about arriving early enough to get a seat.

      In a few minutes music emerged from an organ I could not see. It produced twenty-first century music with mysteriously beautiful dissonances pointing to a God beyond our notions of simple harmonies. It was ethereal. And even though it is not the kind of music I listen to every day, it was magnificent. Unpredictable. Eerie, even. Like God.

      There was to be a confirmation today. The resident bishop would confirm two of the choir members, named Barnaby and Ben. We sang a familiar hymn of Charles Wesley, and the bishop prefaced his confirmation of two of the boys in the choir with a thoughtful sermon centering around the cost of following Christ. Yet, he assured them that even when their faith was costly, Christ would be with them to strengthen them. It was a message of grace not condemnation. It was a message about God, not political opinion.

      Before the two boys emerged from the choir to come forward for their confirmation, they joined the choir in offering the “Sanctus,” another modern piece reflecting cosmic mystery. When the boys bowed before the bishop, they answered his questions firmly and with apparent understanding. The bishop, with a giggle, slung holy water on the boys and on us, turning a somber rite into a moment of joyful laughter for us all.

      We all received the Eucharist, and then sang “Now Thank We All Our God,” and I teared up at my favorite lines in verse three, “Oh may this bounteous God, through all our lives be near us; with ever joyful hearts, to comfort and to cheer us; and keep us in His grace, and guide us when perplexed; and free us from all ills, in this world and the next.”

      The service ended with a more conventional organ piece by Edward Elgar, the blessing of the bishop, and then using the organ to play the “Danse” by Claude Debussy, God spoke through it a message of joy.

      I had to search through the crowd for Natalia as the mass of worshippers exited the church. When I finally spotted her across the way, she was smiling.

      Many of us found God here at Westminster Abbey this morning. As I left the church, I prayed for Barnaby and Ben. And I prayed for Natalia.
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    • Day 7

      Westminster Abbey Crash

      September 2, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      My body got out of bed at 6am and prepared itself for the double tour of Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament. It shaved its face, shampoo'd its hair, dried itself and got dressed in - oh, who cares. I think it put perfume on itself, my body.

      My body walked down to the tube station and caught the Victoria Line to Victoria, then East to Westminster. It stood underneath the statue of Winston Churchill as our tour group gently coalesced out of the chaos around the Portcullis Building. My body put headphones on and followed the talking lady as she walked into the oneiric wonderland that is Westerminster Abbey.

      And there, in that place of death and grandiose self-pity, I felt like I was suddenly in my element. I came to, right in time to enjoy the tour as I walked over the top of Henry Purcell's grave, where he is laid in earth. Sorry about that Henry. You really are my favourite composer a lot of the time.

      Our tour guide Emily was astonishingly good. It was almost like I was getting two tours at once: a learnèd discourse on the history of London and its relationship to the Abbey, and a living demonstration of how you can turn a history lesson into a theatre performance that occurs on the move. Emily was erudite and funny, and was mostly progressive and poetic. I did rankle a little when she gave a tiny disquisition on why Suffragists should be given statues but not Suffragettes, but apart from that she and I were in sync.

      Seeing Handel and Newton was an absolute privilege, especially to know that their faces were sculpted from death masks. Seeing Ted Hughes' memorial stone was disarming; he is one of my favourite poets of all time. I know his ashes are scattered over Dartmoor, but even so I felt like I was running into him somehow.

      There were a thousand things to see and photograph in Westminster Abbey, but the tour moved along at such a clip that I made a decision to do 99% looking and 1% photographing. The place is a vast gothic extravaganza with so many intersecting points with British history that it would take many visits to get some familiarity with the place. If I had any remorse it was that I didn't get time to look at the Cosmati Pavement, which I have studied in depth when I was replicating Holbein's "The Ambassadors" painting. We flew past it to get to some anecdote about Mary Queen of Scots I think. I don't know, it was a blur.

      At the end of that tour, we crossed the road ready to start the next tour, the Houses of Parliament.

      The body didn't want to go, and it bade Stuart a good tour and went back to Westminster Station. Enough was enough. I needed rest, which is what I did for the rest of the day. A coffee in Vauxhall proper (away from the waterfront) that evening and a visit to a great big Tesco to buy a frozen pizza ended the evening gently. But I was still a fucking mess.

      A post-prandial stroll along the sunset Thames, looking gauzy and Turner-ish, did nothing to lift my mood.

      I was Lon-DONE.

      I have decided that for the rest of the visit I can do the British Museum and the Eye, and that's it. I'm encouraging Stuart to come up with his must-do list now before it's too late. As for me, it's time to catch up on some self-care: mindfulness, exercise, art. I need to level out. Totally crashed.
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    • Day 10

      Coronation Day

      May 6, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

      Today has unfortunately not gone to plan. The coronation garden party was poorly planned and we ended up not getting access. We decided to do the crazy thing (extra crazy because of the rain) then and brave the crowds at Westminster Abbey. No words to describe the number of people, and we didn't get to see anything exciting. (Though did hear Big Ben strike at mid day. And I found a squirrel). We made a hasty exit though and had a drink at the pub before retreating to our warm and dry room. We've not stopped since we got here and a few hours to just be still was much needed. It's not takes us long to get board though so now we're heading back to Westminster to see what can be seen...AND we've managed to score tickets to Phantom of the Opera tonight. I've seen it before but it's exciting to see it in its home theatre.

      PS - Decided to come back to Westminster before we head off to dinner and got a few photos.
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