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Newcastle upon Tyne

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    • Newcastle; across the city to Quayside

      23 de outubro de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      Newcastle is a city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear and located on the River Tyne's northern bank.  Originally dependent on its port and, in particular, its status as one of the world's largest ship building and repair centres, the city today is much more diverse. 

      The first recorded settlement was Pons Aelius ("Hadrian's bridge"), a Roman fort and bridge across the River Tyne; it then became part of the powerful Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria.  Newcastel is named after its castle; originally a wooden castle in the Norman times, it was replaced by a stone castle and then rebuilt again in 1172 during the reign of Henry II.

      We start the walk across the city at the West Walls section of the Newcastle town wall, which was built during the 13th and 14th centuries to help protect the town from attack and occupation during times of conflict.  We then walk up towards St James' Park, the home of Newcastle United FC; this is close to Chinatown, one of five in the UK, and we walk through this and pass the Catholic Cathedral Church of St Mary.  We reach Newcastle Central Railway Station; outside of this is the Stephenson Monument, a memorial to George Stephenson who developed the 'Rocket', an early locomotive, with his son Robert and pioneered rail transport and the development of the first passenger railways.  There is a good view of the Newcastle Castle Keep from the station car park.

      As we carry on east we pass the Rutherford Memorial Fountain - a distinctive red sandstone drinking fountain is located at the top of the Bigg Market - and enjoy another view of the Castle from the road here before reaching Newcastle Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Nicholas.  We pass the historic Black Gate, originally the castle’s fortified gatehouse or barbican; this is close to the Moot Hall which was commissioned as a courthouse to replace the facilities at the Castle. 

      We now descend to walk along Quayside and see the magnificent and iconic bridges that cross the River Tyne from Newcastle to Gateshead on the other side (see photo captions); these are beautiful both by day and night.

      A brief visit to Newcastle, but "I'll be back".
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    • Dia 10

      Newcastle upon Tyne

      5 de setembro de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Newcastle liegt am Tyne, der mitten durch die Stadt führt. Es gibt einige mehr oder wenige interessante Brücken, die die Stadtteile miteinander verbinden. Einige interessante Gebäude gibt es ebenfalls zu sehen, aber mehr eigentlich nicht. Der Hafen am Anlageplatz verspricht mehr,als er halten kann. Da muss ich nicht wieder hin.Leia mais

    • Dia 3

      Newcastle

      26 de setembro de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

      I made it to Newcastle as planned. Edmonton-Calgary-London Heathrow-Newcastle. It was 18 hours from when my first flight. I slept more than I thought I would on the transatlantic flight but Leighla the eight year in the seat beside me kept kicking me. She and her mother were off to Oxford to join up with their father who was training on flight simulators for the new Cormorant helicopter. They were otherwise quite charming and had left Comox 10 hours earlier than I had so I could forgive Leighla. By the time I got to Newcastle it was dark. The train trip was easy however walking around in downtown Newcastle to find my hotel using Google maps was a little unnerving. I looked left rather than right once while crossing the road and came close to being hit by a car. I have been more careful since. The hotel is very nice and quiet so I had a good first night.

      During my travels yesterday I noticed that the soles of both my hiking boots were coming detached. There was no way they would last the trip. I found a shoe repair place and headed there first thing this morning. I dropped them off and they were ready by the afternoon. That was a relief as I think it would have been a challenge doing the hike in running shoes.

      My main priority for Newcastle was to visit Segedunum the Roman fort at Wallsend near the mouth of the Tyne river. They had talked alot about it in the online course I had taken. I enjoyed walking around the excavations and the gallery but the less passionate may have not enjoyed as much. Mr toilet paper holder man who is travelling with me got very excited as they had stones from a Roman latrine they had excavated in the museum. It was the highlight for him. He wanted a selfie. What was very odd, if one get over the oddness of travelling with the pathology departments toilet paper holder is that 2 people who saw me take the photo came up and showed me their travel companions. No toilet paper roll covers. They actually suggested that when in London I should go to the Victoria and Albert museum to get a photo with an original Crapper toilet. Mr TPHM is not running the trip. It is about the experience not the Instagram photo.

      We headed off to Tynemouth on the coast afterwards on the recommendation of another seat mate. There are the ruins of a monastery on a point looking out at the ocean. Tynemouth was a pretty village and the monastery and views of the ocean were very beautiful. Well worth the visit.

      After picking up the hiking boots, we headed downtown for a stroll around. We took in the Laing gallery, a pleasant little gallery with some great paintings by artists unknown to me. We then headed down to river to check out the castle, the cathedral and walk back to the hotel along the river.

      Tomorrow we off to Carlisle.
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    • Dia 8

      Newcastle upon Tyne

      6 de abril, Inglaterra ⋅ 🌬 18 °C

      Newcastle upon Tyne - gibts einen schöneren Namen für eine Stadt?
      Newcastle ansich ist recht schnuckelig - für mehrere Tage aber bestimmt langweilig.
      Wir haben die Charles Grey Statue „besucht“ -> Namensgeber für den Earl Grey Tea und haben natürlich auch ein Haferl Tee dort getrunken.
      Sonst einen langen Spaziergang an der Tyne entlang gemacht und die 7 Brücken dort bewundert. Auch das Castle ging beim Vorbeigehen mit.

      Abends sind wir dann im Hotel-Pub gelandet (OYO Royal Hotel -> altmodisch und schnuckelig) und haben ein paar Gläschen vernichtet.
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    • Dia 18

      Driving to Newcastle via Harrogate

      13 de setembro de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      We had every intention of going to Durham, honestly. I had heard that Durham Cathedral was incomparable, and that other people had laid down happy memories there. I was going off scant mythologies and second-hand memories in this part of the world.

      But by the time we had packed up the car and executed the diamond-heist-difficulty check out procedure (which involved a complicated and precise series of key turns, fob swipes, code types, and corridor walks), I was ready for a coffee before we had even left York.

      I saw the name Harrogate and on pure instinct asked if we could go there. And on pure instinct, Stuart said yes, never mind the fact that English people drive dangerously and were nearly causing a collision every minute. It's not good enough, Britain, to tailgate, change lanes without leaving a crash avoidance space, speed into oncoming traffic, enter intersections without checking them... I can say with the pompous certitude of a learner driver that English drivers do not drive to an Australian motoring standard.

      Driving into Harrogate was unexpectedly congested. We soon found out why: the place is amazing, and perfect for tourism. It felt like a different kind of tourism to Nottingham's Robin Hoodery or York's Renaissance Fun-fayre. This was more like the Blue Mountains back home: a traditional spa resort with maximalist luxury architecture, still luring in a certain older and parochial traveller looking for a nice and pretty place that sells expensive things. To call it picturesque is an understatement: its neat beauty and extravagant proportions were everything.

      My foot was bung so I was limping around a bit, but I couldn't stop. There was just too much to see: around every corner, more cobblestones, more columns, more fancy windows, more hanging flower baskets. We took our time walking around, photographing Dahlias, buildings, and ourselves.

      The drive into Newcastle was unexpected. Everything was so agrarian until it wasn't. Newcastle-Upon-Tyne doesn't sprawl the way Newcastle-Ever-Mine does. And once we had passed the city threshold, suddenly all the buildings were crammed into a tight perimeter, reaching up high. The buildings are all large, but they are squished together on steep ravines. In fact, this is the most vertical city I've ever seen. (I haven't been to Santiago or Hong Kong, but I've been to Dunedin and San Francisco). It's practically Gotham City with its art deco, its caricatured proportions, its achingly nostalgic vistas.

      And with that architectural verticality, that other kind of verticality: massive class differences between the rich and poor. There are beggars here smoking underneath castle archways, and people in Prada suits walking past them with Waitrose bags full of organic provender. It makes the place hard to read. I am so excited I can't even deal with it - I want to walk everywhere around here, as long as my foot will let me.

      I saw an albatross, an eagle, a grey squirrel, and a cranky dachshund today. The dachshund was barking at a busker performing Asturias in Harrogate. I wasn't sure if they were a double act, you know, good cop/bad cop that sort of thing. I thought about it as I walked out of Waitrose with my bag of organic provender.
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    • Dia 19

      Newcastle upon Tyne

      14 de setembro de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

      Chris and I were not ready to take in the sheer grandness of Newcastle. This city is not like ours in Australia. It is a full on, wall to wall demonstration of Victoriana. But I'll get to that.

      The drive up was uneventful. We passed the Angel of the North statue but in a goodly amount of traffic and so did not stop. We can say, we've seen it.

      Once safely ensconced in our top floor apartment overlooking the Tyne Bridge and the High Level Bridge, we headed out for a walk. Our amazement at the buildings in this city just grew by the moment. There was little use in putting your camera away, as every angle, every vista brought something new and incredible.

      From Grey Street that culminates in a 'Nelson's Column-like pedestal with Earl Grey atop it, to every side street, all the buildings are ornate, tall, highly decorated Victorian grandees. Newcastle Australia might have one or two, but nothing like this.

      St Nicholas' Cathedral has THE most amazing tower I have ever seen on a cathedral. It is like somehting out of Tolkien, and it did used to burn beacons in times past.

      Newcastle Castle, from which the fair city gets its name, is intact and in good repair. We had a wonderful couple of hours walking around its labyrinthine structures, up so many flights of spiral staircases, its keep has a grand hall, an entrance hall, a chapel, royal rooms, and military placements.

      After our castle morning, we decided we would walk across High Level Bridge one way and back over the river on the Tyne Bridge. For some reason now, I tend to get mild vertigo at heights, and once again, I found my legs feeling a bit weak crossing the first bridge and just wanting to get to the other side. I have learned from experience - don't stop, keep going. I managed a few pics from High Level Bridge but none on the Tyne Bridge, the little cousin of the Sydney Harbour Bridge was too much for me with whoooshing traffic on one side and the water and drop the other.

      We both did a small spot of shopping, Chris got some graphic novels and I bought some Chopin Ballades in a large traditional music shop, the like of which we don't seem to have anymore at home. A nice memory for me. We've eaten out most days, and finished up tonight at a Quayside Restaurant overlooking the Tyne.

      Newcastle has been a working class town. You can see it in some of its history. It has a really good feel to it. Chris and I both feel safe here. Relaxing in a very comfortable loft, itself in a gorgeous old Victorian building with lions adorning our windows, this has been a good place to decompress.
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    • Dia 3

      Shopping

      15 de junho de 2022, Inglaterra ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Die Jungs brauchen noch was

    • Dia 2

      Einlaufen in New Castle

      6 de setembro de 2018, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      Nach einer unruhigen Nacht für mich, da alles so eng ist, sind wir nach dem Frühstück an Deck und beobachteten die Küste Englands und das einlaufen in England.
      Wir hatten einen schönen Tag mit Sonne vor uns. Kein typisches Englandwetter mit Wolken und Regen.
      Ich filmte alles mit der Gopro und Carsten fotografierte mit dem Handy.
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    • Dia 2

      Millenium Bridge New Castle

      6 de setembro de 2018, Inglaterra ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      Von der Castle sind wir runter ans Ufer des Tyne gelaufen. Der Fluss ist bekannt für seine vielen Brücken, unter anderem der Millenium Bridge. Wir konnten sogar sehen wie sie sich erhob, damit ein Schiff drunter herfahren konnte.Leia mais

    Você também pode conhecer este local seguindo os nomes:

    Newcastle upon Tyne, NET, نيوكاسل أبون تاين, Newcastle, Nyukasl apon Tayn, Горад Ньюкасл-апан-Тайн, Нюкасъл ъпон Тайн, নিউক্যাসল আপন ট্যাইন, نیوکاسڵ, Νιούκασλ, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, نیوکاسل آپون تاین, An Caisteal Nuadh, ניוקאסל, ニューカッスル・アポン・タイン, ნიუკასლ-აპონ-ტაინი, 뉴캐슬어폰타인, Novum Castellum, Niukaslas prie Taino, Ņūkāsla pie Tainas, Ньюкасл, न्यूकॅसल अपॉन टाईन, نیوکاسل, Neuchâté, Ньюкасл-апон-Тайн, Њукасл на Тајну, டைன் ஆற்றங்கரை நியூ காசில், นิวคาสเซิลอะพอนไทน์, Newcastle trên sông Tyne, ניוקאסטל, 紐卡素, 泰恩河畔纽卡斯尔

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