Houses across from Crosby Beach near Liverpool

Archived entries for UK

More London

There’s just too much to catch up on. Maybe I should start summarising. Where’d I leave off? Sunday morning. Well, it was actually afternoon by the time we turned into tourists again…

After not enough sleep Amy and I realise that we need every moment to fit in just some of what London has to offer. Today Spitalfields markets were calling us. Only a few minutes after walking in we realise that some of next Sunday would have to be devoted to the funky designers, gorgeous jewellery and interesting food. Amy pulled quite a face when she tried a strange Middle Eastern dip we were offered in a leaf. Poor girl had to buy some chocolate sultanas to get over it. A skirt and a couple of prints later we were off to the Globe. The weather had turned crazy by this stage. Rain that flew around and under umbrellas. Wind that flipped umbrellas inside-out. It was time for a coffee stop. Sadly it wasn’t time for the rain to stop so we battled acrossed the Millenium Bridge on the Thames to the theatre.

The third Globe Theatre really is quite stunning – not to mention authentic. We were there to see an original pronuciation of Romeo and Juliet. Given my lack of sleep and the fact that I was going to be standing (a ‘yardling’ as it is referred to) for the three hours of the play, I went along with some trepidation. I had nothing to worry about because the play and atmosphere was fantastic. James Garnon did an excellent job of playing Mercutio.
Remember how I mentioned it was authentic? That means that there isn’t a roof over the centre so yardlings like me, while getting the best view, are also exposed to the elements. Nothing a plastic poncho couldn’t fix. With jubilation Amy and I leave the theatre with soggy shoes and freezing hands. Shakespeare’s never been so fun.

Monday meant two things – first day on my own and first day of the Harrods sale. I ventured down around lunchtime and avoided the queue to get in by finding a side door. I wasn’t really expecting to find anything (have you seen the Oz dollar to UK pound conversion rate lately?), but thought it’d be fun to have a look anyway. I laughed my way past the ladies lining up to get into the shoe section and instead moved right along to the fashion section. I smell a gorgeous coat before I see it and after dropping my jaw at the £1100 price tag (it WAS half price!), I decide that a cow’s life is probably worth that much. Who knows, it could’ve even been two cows. Shopping in Harrods is certainly less effort than Top Shop… except for the expense.

Surprisingly enough I leave empty handed and felt that it was time to get cultural again. I fly on and off the tube and arrive on the doorstep of the V&A Museum. The place is huge so I stay focused and head straight for the exhibition on British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood. What a fantastically crazy woman she is. The exhibition was really well put together to show her progression from punk to peasant to fine couture. Most people found the 10 inch heels from which Naomi Campbell fell to be amusing. Another favourite of mine was the Witches Suit (with the very interesting inverted point in the shoulder), the corsets and a huge silk dress. Sorry, I can’t describe that one so you’ll just have to go see for yourself.

Still not galleried out I tube it over to Charing Cross for a quick wander through the National Gallery. Damn gorgeous stuff in there. REALLY amazing works of art that would have Sydneysiders queuing and paying. Not here though. It’s all free and plenty of space to admire without an American tourist sticking their head in front of yours and declaring “I don’t geddit”.
Turner’s Rain, Steam and Speed was possibly my absolute favourite. The Execution of Lady Jane Grey by Delaroche is an amazing depiction of Lady Jane Grey who was Queen of England for nine days before being beheaded at the age of 17. Delaroche also painted one of my Mum’s favourite paintings, La Jeune Martyre (The Young Martyr) which is hung in that place they call the Louvre.

Time passes too quickly so I promised myself another longer visit in the next few days. I ran off so I could try and get a ticket to see the Brodsky Quartet playing Shostakovich and Britten as part of the City of London festival. The concert was being held in a gorgeous old church not far from Monument station called St Margaret Patterns. Luckily for me they decided to open the choir section upstairs so more people could get in. It didn’t matter that the seats were so upright that I couldn’t lean back because the performance was excellent. First off was a solo cello piece by soloist whose name I can’t remember. Then the fantastic Brodsky quartet. It was maybe the best £5 I’d spent since arriving in London. And to think there was another Shostakovich and Britten concert on Thursday evening!

That will have to wait for the next installment. Oh how will I ever catch up to today!

London… 1st installment

I guess I need to take over where Peter left off. If you want to know some of what I’ve been up to before now then check out his tour diary.

Friday after leaving Peter at Heathrow his friend Mikey quite generously drove me all the way to Amy’s place in Greenwich. London roads are crazy. Think New York and then think the complete opposite. No grids around here. But with Mikey’s driving experience on England’s roads we were able to decode the signs and get to Amy’s in not too long.
Being the party animals we are we then headed off to waste the rest of our Friday night doing grocery shopping at Sainsbury’s down the road. This supermarket is completely run on green power. There are windmills out the front generating electricity for the entire place. All of Greenwich is a bit weird. A lot of it was constructed around the millenium and so looks nothing like the rest of London. It reminds me a lot of Homebush in Sydney with its perfectly landscaped streets, smooth roads and not a person in sight.
**New and interesting note which I previously forgot to mention: Sainsbury’s had a Boom Bip track playing in the store. Most impressive. Maybe an employee with some musical taste got hold of the stereo that evening.**

We had a late start to the day after a late night of watching the Glastonbury festival on tv. Despite the rain we headed off to Oxford Circus to battle through the crowds and do a spot of shopping. Since before leaving Australia I’d been threatened with being dragged off to Top Shop (which my good friend Nicole just shook her head and said ‘You’re gonna hate it’). It was everything I expected it to be: bad disco-pop music, bright lights, bright clothes and far too many of them. Luckily enough Amy worked me up to it by going into H & M first. With her assistance I even managed to find a couple of new things for my wardrobe. Give me a tiny boutique any day.

The highlight of the day was always going to be the Olympic Torch Relay Concert. How could it not be with people like Rod Stewart, Baby Spice and Will Young (Britain’s own Guy Sebastian)? Painful but fun is probably the best way to describe it. Amy and I had the bad fortune of standing directly behind the stage but we stuck it out for a while anyway. Seeing James Brown (in a smashing red suit) was fun, as was Ozzy Osbourne. But what made us laugh most was some very English lads who would sarcastically yell out ‘Who the fuck are you?’ every time someone like Baby Spice or Will Young came on stage with teenage girls screaming for them.

That night we headed off to Covent Garden to meet up with Simon who I haven’t seen since a bit after the Sydney Olympics. The only problem was that we forgot the name of the bar where the party was happening so we thought we’d take a guess. At sometime around midnight I get a call from Simon and realise that Retox, where we’d been sitting for a couple of hours, was not the place. We head on over to a place just around the corner called Garden Bar (or was it Gardening Bar?), wait in a small VIP line (because we were party guests) and then pay another ridiculous cover charge for the benefit of being able to drink in London past 11pm. I still can’t believe that a city like London still closes its pubs at 11pm.
Let me make a long story short. We somehow amused ourselves in the bar til a bit after 3am but didn’t manage to get home til after 5am because of just a little bit of difficulty with night buses. Getting in when the sun’s up isn’t all that nice but who can blame us when the sun rises at 4am.

I’m currently at Dublin airport using a computer with a very dodgy space bar so I must leave the rest of London for another entry. As soon as Justine’s plane gets in we’ll be off to Galway!

London still

My first post! Sitting in the usual net cafe on Queensway. Peter’s gone home so I’ll have to take over the trip diary now – no more relying on his!
There’s quite a bit to catch up on so once I get my thoughts together I’ll put up my first PROPER post. Galleries, concerts, Harrods sale and more.



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