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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!ibmpcug!robobar!stl!bnr.co.uk!stc!bocmunro
- From: bocmunro@bnr.co.uk (Bruce Munro)
- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Subject: Re: London Travel
- Date: 21 Jan 1993 19:32:26 GMT
- Organization: BNR Europe, New Southgate, London.
- Lines: 162
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1jmtoaINN923@bnsgd245.bnr.co.uk>
- References: <1jlav8INNcce@uwm.edu>
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-
- In article <1jlav8INNcce@uwm.edu> ddean@csd4.csd.uwm.edu (Dorothy Dean) writes:
- >
- > Have fun in London! I did. Much as I love museums, the British Museum
- >is not on my list of top 5 things to see. I would list theater first. And
- >you can get good prices on tickets the day of the performance at Leicester
- >Square. Just ignore the Pizza Hut, Burger King, MacDonald's place ringing
- >the square. Once you get a block or so away it stops looking like "Little US". I
- >found a nice vegetarian restaurant just 2 blocks from the square. It a tube
- >stop so it's easy to get to.
-
- Just north of Leicester Square is the Soho area which has masses of
- restaurants, including the Chinatown area based around Gerard Street.
- There's also a plethora of restaurants to the east around Covent Garden.
- Prices and quality vary greatly, but one place I can recommend is the
- African restaurant in the Africa Centre near to Covent Garden tube. Don't
- be put off by the grotty surroundings when you go down the steps to the
- restaurant. It gets better in the restaurant itself, the food is priced
- well and the staff are really friendly.
-
- >Getting around London is easiest on the tube. Traffic is awful and cabs are
- >much slower during the day than the tube. I wish I had taken buses a little
- >bit more because even though it is not as efficient as the tube, there is so
- >much to see. The architecture is amazing to one like me who comes from the
- >midwest where buildings are not older than 180 years -- at the most. Even
- >small buildings, houses, etc are wonderful to view.
-
- Buses can be OK for short hops, at weekend especially.
-
- >When you get to London, pick up the weekly papers that list what's
- >happening. I cannot remember the titles. but there are 2 good ones I found
- >that do theater reviews (there is a LOT of theater to choose from, if you
- >like theater at all you will never be satisfied with I play). If you arrive
- >by train from Gatwick, you can find the papers in the information center at
- >Victoria Station. Train is the cheapest, quickest, most scenic way to get
- >from Gatwick.
-
- The listings magazines to look out for are Time Out and What's on and
- Where In London. I'd recommend the former if you're into pub gigs or
- slightly more esoteric entertainment. Time Out also do a good restaurant
- guide, which might not be worth buying for a tourist, but you can always
- have a glance at one in a bookshop. Victoria Station now has a large
- new bookshop on the concourse.
-
- >The papers I picked up were not written for tourists. So they were useful
- >for me especially in avoiding the high cost, tourist junk.
- >I made a trip to Greenwich to see (and stand on) the prime meridian. They
- >have a very nice gift shop with inexpensive astronomy-related stuff. They
- >also have the observatory set up as a museum and it is well worth the trip
- >to see how the observers worked. On the way to the observatory if you come
- >by tube, you get to cross the river by tunnel! It is worth going to ride on
- >the wonderful old elevator (very large elevator) to get to the tunnel. It's
- >been 3 years since I was there and I think you have to purchase a special
- >ticket for Greenwich which means maybe it is by train rather than
- >tube--still inexpensive. There is an interesting street market at
- >Greenwich.
-
- I presume this refers to the old pedestrian tunnel. The train to get to
- it isn't part of the Underground system, but is called the Docklands
- Light Railway. I'm pretty certain the Travelcards cover this as well
- though. The stop for the foot tunnel is Island Gardens.
-
- > Actually, I found the street markets really fun. In a country
- >where the temperature extremes are not as extreme as here in Wisconsin,
- >street markets are a realistic way to do business while keeping overhead
- >costs down. The Hackney street market was the best. It is not littered
- >with tourists so the vendors sell normal, everday stuff. Lace, lace, lace
- >at good prices for curtains. Chickens, fish, produce--all out in the open.
- >I got a couple good used books at a book stall. On one side of the market
- >area there is a row of shops. I noticed that the shops are built like the
- >ones I have seen in the old parts of New Orleans and San Francisco. They
- >can be completely open to the outside with no screens. One place in
- >particular worth seeing is a little shop that sells eel in dozens of
- >different forms. The entire shop floor and walls are lined with pretty
- >tiles. I don't know how old it was but it looked old. There were eels
- >hanging in the window (which wans't a window because there was no glass).
-
- Other markets worth seeing are at Portobello Road, Brick Lane and
- Petticoat Lane. The pie and eel shops, with their tiled walls, are a
- feature of East London. The menu is usually restricted to either meat pie
- or eels, with mashed potato and liquor (parsley gravy). Not to everyones
- taste, but I love it! Cheap too.
-
- > I was there in June during a drought. For the two weeks that I was there,
- >there was no rain. It was hot (27-28 C everyday) and uncomfortable for the
- >people there. They aren't used to so much sun. I had dinner with friends
- >of a friend in Minnesota. One of them had what looked to me like 2nd degree
- >burns on his leg. It was from sunburn. A rather rare malady, I gather. It
- >was the kind of severe burn that I have never seen here because we know when
- >to get out of the sun and to use sun block. I would have gone to a doctor
- >immmediately. You can expect much more realistic temperatures.
-
- Remember, only mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the midday sun. Actually,
- people are starting to get a little more sensible about the sun these days
- although lots of people seem to think it will only be bad abroad, and get
- terribly blase when they're back in England. It can get hot, especially
- in London, though it's usually only a couple of weeks in the year. The last
- few years the hottest periods have been late May/June. The traditional
- hot months of July and August have been bloody miserable recently.
-
- >I searched out women's bookstores and used bookstores. In fact, I never got
- >to Harrod's (still don't know what it looks like) but I brought back a
- >suitcase full of books.
-
- For secondhand bookshops try Charing Cross Road, leading north from
- Leicester Square, there's loads of them. Also Foyles as well, which
- must qualify as the worst organised shop in the world. They've probably
- got the book you want, finding it's the hard part.
-
- >One other thing I would recommend is to see what the Londoners call "the
- >City". It is the oldest part of London and there you can see remnants of the
- >Roman walls. There is a museum there that a friend recommends highly. I
- >did not get a chance to see it because I arrived too late. The museum
- >traces the history of London from pre-Roman times.
- >I guess I would recommend seeing one of the old churches--maybe St. Paul's
- >to see the tombs inside the church and get a feel for the way the times were
- >when the place was built.
- >
- >Notice that I haven't mentioned the crown jewels, Buckingham Palace, Tower
- >of London, etc. I am bored by those because they really do cater to the
- >lowest common denominator of tourist. If you want an interesting look at
- >the Tower Bridge, you can take an inexpensive ride on one of the boats that
- >carries passengers on the Thames. In fact, when I went to Greenwich I took
- >the boat one way. The bartender on the boat recommended a shandy for
- >something refreshing to drink in the heat. It really was quite good.
- >The book I found most useful is too old to be much good now. It was old
- >when I went to London. But a second best and very good guide I found was
- >the Fodor's "Great Travel Value Series" book on London. It cost $6.95 and
- >really had good advice.
-
- You can also go up onto the overhead walkway of Tower Bridge, which gives
- some spectacular views of the River and the surrounding city. Probably gets
- pretty crowded in summer though. Some of the main tourist sites can be
- worth a visit if you go in the winter, as you can avoid the worst of the
- queues and so on. Mind you even then things like the Tower of London
- can get pretty bad.
-
- >I ate breakfast at the hotel (cheap student housing near Hyde Park) and
- >usually caught lunch on the streets from vendors. Evenings I ate at greasy
- >fish and chips places sometimes and sometimes went for Indian or Chinese
- >food. The pubs are good too for lunches. Except you have to ask for
- >"snacks". The snacks can be quite substantial and still very modestly
- >priced. I suppose the safest would be to ask for food. The licensing laws
- >have changed so pubs no longer keep the crazy patchwork of hours they used
- >to.
-
- When asking for food in a pub there are often two sorts available; bar snacks
- and full meals, it depends on the pub though. Some pubs will have what
- is virtually a restaurant attached and do full meals, but these will often
- do the bar snacks which are simple and cheap. Look out for blackboards on
- the wall detailing the specials of the day. Licensing hours have improved
- in the last few years, with pubs open all day if they wish. Some still
- close during the afternoon, but these will mostly be well away from the
- centre where trade isn't enough to make it worth while staying open. Pubs
- still close at 11pm though, except on certain special occasions, so for
- late night drinking you need to find a club or restaurant. Bloody annoying
- for an alky like me! :-)
-
- --
- Bruce Munro. <B.O.C.Munro@bnr.co.uk> (Note new address)
- BNR Europe Ltd, Oakleigh Rd South, London N11 1HB.
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