Saturday, January 31, 2009

the tower to kensington to greenwich

On Friday, Jan. 16, I took the students to the Tower of London. The students were divided into small groups, and each gave a short presentation on some feature of the Tower. The Bloody Tower, the site of the scaffold, the White Tower, and the Ravens where all among the features they researched. One group even enacted the gruesome end of poor Margaret Pole. We then climbed the ramparts, admired the Crown Jewels, and checked out the graffiti in the Beauchamp Tower.

Here are some of the students enjoying the Tower:



One nifty feature of the Tower is its squeaky clean toilets. This is something they don't tell you in the guide books, but look:

Loo of the Year Awards in 2003 and 2005! How nifty is that?

After a tasty lunch at Grazing, Shane and I tubed it over to Kensington, where we pondered the Albert Memorial and walked around Royal Albert Hall. Here, fancy types who can afford overpriced tickets were emerging from cabs to see yet another new Cirque de Soleil show. We then walked down Exhibition Road to the Victoria and Albert and Natural History Museums. Here's Albert, gone but gilded:


Not satisfied with a nearly full day of walking, Shane and I then hopped on the Docklands Light Railway (DLR), and went to Greenwich. We got off the train at Island Gardens, and then crossed the river through a Victorian pedestrian tunnel that runs beneath the Thames. The Cutty Sark is getting a facelift, so we couldn't see it, but we did stop off at the nearby Trafalgar Tavern for ales and lovely views of the river before walking through the old naval College and up a hill to the Royal Observatory. The day had darkened, and from here we had great views of Canary Wharf and the Millennium Dome at night. I was happy with the night photos I took up here. This one is my favorite:

Notice the green laser projected from the Observatory that marks the Prime Meridian. East is East and West is West, and here is where they meet.

We ended the day with another ale at the King's Arms in Greenwich before boarding the DLR and heading back into London.

You'll Robert Wright's walking tour of Kensington here and his tour of Greenwich here.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Loo of the Year" ---I think we need to add this award to the Rogue Festival. If a show, rather than a venue, wins it, it might not be such an honor!