Friday, May 28, 2010

4 Days in London

I have often dreamed of visiting the United Kingdom with Ben, but I honestly never thought it would happen in this decade. Somehow, the stars aligned this spring, and it just seemed like the perfect time for us to take such a wonderfully indulgent trip. So, we closed our eyes, opened our wallets, and went for it!

First item of business, visit London. Show Ben all of the things I fell in love with during my semester abroad in 2002.
Here I am at the BYU London Center: 27 Palace Court. 8 years older, and wiser too.

The Orangerie at Kensington Gardens (my old jogging territory)

Kensington Palace
Royal Albert Hall

Serpentine River, dividing Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park

Buckingham Palace

We randomly happened to be on Birdcage Walk when people started gathering along the sides of the road. Soon we heard drums, and then this procession of important looking British people happened. Not sure what it was all about (parade commemorating new guards?), but it seemed like the quintessential London moment!

Big Ben and Little Ben (he lost 15 lbs. before leaving on this trip!)

The Houses of Parliament
Westminster Abbey. We did the audio tour here and loved it. SO much history has happened and been commemorated in this one building.

We didn't get a picture, but after Westminster Abbey we went to the Imperial War Rooms and Churchill Museum, which was incredible. Seeing the bunker from which Churchill directed the UK's forces in WWII really made the war seem so real to us.

And just one more Big Ben picture (we took about 10 throughout the trip)

This phone booth was just begging us to use it for a photo op.

Ben at the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square. Here's what I love: Trafalgar Square minus the pigeons (thanks to a recent city ordinance not to feed them); a whirlwind trip through the National Gallery to see only the best paintings (not my favorite way, but we had lots to see); the fact that all of the London museums and galleries are FREE to the public.

Classic photo of Big Ben on the Thames, taken by Ben. Yes, I know that "Big Ben" actually refers to the bell within the tower, not actually the clock tower. I'm counting on you using your X-ray goggles to see the bell. :)

View of Tower Bridge from our river cruise on the way to Greenwich.

Ben straddling the Prime Meridian in Greenwich. I remembered thinking of Ben the entire time I was at Greenwich (just a little side area of London) 8 years ago. I just kept thinking that this was a place he would be fascinated with and would love to see. And was I right? Yes. We both loved it. It is the home of the Royal Observatory where the problem of determining one's longitude while at sea was first tackled. They have a great (free!) museum about how the problem was actually solved in two different ways--once by using complicated star maps (made at the Observatory) and another by using extremely accurate time pieces, which are on display there. Very cool.

The red ball on the top of the Royal Observatory drops daily at 1:00, a sign by which sailors have set their clocks for centuries.

Tower of London. We did the classic Beefeater tour and loved it.

London Bridge. I just had to take a picture because it's not a very fancy bridge for all the hype it gets. Why don't we sing about Tower Bridge falling down?

Millennium Bridge, on the other hand, is pretty spectacular. Don't worry -- we watched out for dementors as we walked across on our way to the Globe.

We saw Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre. It was pretty gruesome and a bit disturbing, but we enjoy it (you all know how Ben likes his bloodshed). Notice the black sheet coming out from the stage. I think this is something new they did specifically for this play. The groundlings in the standing room only section had to stand under this sheet, poking their heads up through little holes. It was so funny to see their heads popping out! Then they had larger slits in the sheet, and throughout the play scary things (like bloody bodies) would pop up out of these slits and reach for the groundlings' heads. There were also lots of bloody bodies popping up out of trap doors in the stage. Yeah . . . so . . . I guess they have to come up with something different to do after showing Shakespeare plays in the same theatre for several hundreds of years.

We would like to thank the Stephensons, our good friends from NJ, for making our trip to London possible. They now live in London, and they opened their house to us (Emma gave up her suite on the top floor for us) and let us stay. We had a great time getting to see them again! On Wednesday we spent the morning going to their neighborhood park, which happens to be this really amazing park that is used as a setting for period films and such. Above are the 4 Stephenson kids heading to the park.

And here we are at Chiswick House, built during the reign of George II as a summer home for some important guy (Lord Burlington?). We took a tour of the house with the kids and enjoyed Magnum bars while the kids played a bit in the park. It was the perfect end to our stay in London.

Now . . . stay tuned for York, Scotland, and a random 1-hour visit to Amsterdam!

10 comments:

JoDee said...

Wow! I'm so glad you were able to do this! What a fun time - I'm super jealous.

Mary Pugh said...

Looks amazing! I am so glad you guys were able to make it happen!

Hollie and Mike Christiansen said...

That is awesome Jenn!!! So glad you guys had a great time and enjoyed every second!

David and Amy said...

I've been looking forward to seeing/hearing about this! It looks like everything was FABULOUS, I am looking forward to reading about the rest of your trip!

Paul and Shug said...

Oh Griff, your trip really should end with meeting up with Shug and Paul in Paris, should it not? I guess A-town will have to do. (Not a shabby 2nd place.)
PS- We are not in Thailand. We didn't go. We're in Anchorage and I'm at work.

Autumn said...

Looks like a great trip! I wish we had Jenn along with us on our trip so she could have told us everything about London.

Deidre said...

I think I just died of envy! My sister did England abroad last fall and LOVED every moment. I'm so happy you two got to enjoy such a wonderful, memorable, and educational vacation.

The Sorensens said...

Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Kensington Gardens looks BEAUTIFUL in the summer. WOW! So glad you loved War Rooms, and what is this about Amsterdam? Can't wait to hear the details!

tysqui said...

What an awesome trip. From the post: "you all know how Ben likes his bloodshed", when I first read this line, I read it like the following and was confused: you all know how Ben likes his blood shed. Don't forget that space in there.

Mal said...

Yeay!! I'm so glad you two got to go to London together! I know how much you loved it there.