This week was spent on having a Roman experience in Bath on Saturday, and Lord's and Wimbledon on Sunday. But let me finish what I have left incomplete.
So it was my second day in Edinburgh ! After a tired day's sleep with no supper, I got up by 7. A very good, and filling breakfast - cornflakes+muesli and bread with baked beans and half done egg- at the hotel which comes along with the rent( it is B&B-Bed and Breakfast). Started my day out by 10. I had to vacate my room and placed my luggage with the reception so that I could pick it up later. The normal check out time is 11am.
It was a sunny day. Again, an hour long walk to the centre, crossed the Bridge to the new Town, walked to Calton hill which has some construct like Roman circus and a tall Nelson monument. Climbed the steep roads and steps to reach the top of the hill by 10. It was perfect silence ! One side of the hill has nothing but some hills at distance and greenery in between, and the other three sides are occupied by the township with sea at one end. I don't know how long I stood there alone with the water on the rock in small pits have become ice, no intention to melt even with the Sun shining on it. I woke up from my dreams when a bell rang in some church below. It was 11 ! I agree to the fact that to experience this peace, for getting a feel of being a part of the Universe, you don't need to come this long. But what I wanted to say was, this is what you find common in any part of the World. You don't need language to experience it, rather language can't convey this experience !
Climbed down and walked to the next bus stop and my aim was to see the seashore. Took bus 22 and with a day pass again, reached the shore area. There was an old luxury Royal ship parked namely, Royal Yacht Britannia - used by the Royal family for cruises. Again, an entry fee of £7 feels not worth it ! The shopping complex from where you get the view of the sea, the ship, was constructed like a ship. A lot of kids playing around, full of joy and fun ! And there was a kid sitting on the 'bishop' of a giant chess board thinking where to move it to, playing with her sister :) !
Back in bus on my way back, again kids were ruling the World. Landed back in the town by 1. Walked around the new part of the town, went down the gardens which come just below the Castle on the other side. Again, back to Royal Mile after a lunch at McD. I have really fallen love with this place - the pipes, the smiles, the hills.......
Visited the Whisky heritage centre. I told the salesman,' I don't drink. So I need a souvenir, it should have whisky, but a memorable piece of something to remember'. He showed me a small barrel, with a small bottle inside with 14 years old Whisky ! It looks a piece worth a souvenir for £10.
Winded up my walks, took a bus back to B& B and took my bag and back in Royal mile again by 4:45. Walked through it for the last time ! I have to leave it. Back to the station by 5:15. And the return journey started by 5:30. Again, the same phases, the sea along with us, snow appears after 20mins, and it is dark by 6:30. The train leaves me at Kings X by 10:20 and am walking back home at 11:30 getting down from the tube at East ham.
It was a good trip with lot of memories. I think the Scots resemble me of the Sikhs. They love to enjoy, they are proud and famous being brave, and they keep their tradition and make their mark. Seeing the cartoon postcards of Scotts in Edinburgh confirmed the last one too, they make good jokes out themselves !I think I will have to write for one more month after coming back to India, to finish off my backlog
People don't care how much you know; they want to know how much you care !
Monday, March 15, 2004
Monday, March 08, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 8
Scotland - the land of Bagpipes, and Scotch Whisky ! The land of Scottish the Braves ! The birthplace of Golf ! The land of castles ! But I had no idea where to start and what problem are waiting for me when I landed in Edinburgh at 11:33. Just went to the information centre in the rail station and asked for anything can be done for getting an accommodation. they should me to another counter open for accommodation. They charge you £5 ( I am sorry for using £ sometimes and saying 'pounds' sometimes. My funny keyboard doesn't show up £ sometimes.) for each booking you make from the counter. But luckily, they had only hi-fi hotel infos and my budget can't exceed £30. As already lost £46.10( for missing the train), I have to compensate it somewhere else. Here again, I took my trump card, the printout from net and showed them and asked them where this Mayfield gardens is.I had taken some 6 addresses and 3 of them were in Mayfield Gardens. So I was sure that this place is full of B&Bs. The first half of the answer was disappointing, but the second half was good. They said, "it is out of the town, about 30mins walk from here" !!! So I am in the heart of the Town and the town ends in 30mins walk :)) ! Good for me ! She tried two three places with the number I gave, but none had vacancies( I know I will burn my hands if I do make a call). She, then, gave me a rough map. Came out of the station, through a wrong exit and asked the first person I met, the nearest bus stop which can take me to Mayfield gardens. It was amazing ! The place was lonely and this guy was painting a wall standing on a ladder.He came down and came to show me the way to the bus stand and he walked until the stop was in sight and then, went back ! Now, it looks like you are not in a strange place ! See the people ! The whole perspective changes ! I walked to the bus stop and there were two people, asked one of them. He explained, " You can get in to 5 or 33. Better take a day pass, it will cost you £1.80 and keep the change and the machine in the bus will not give back change if you put £2 or something like that !" The other guy added, "just count for some 3-4 stops and you will reach a place where the bus will take a turn, if it is 33. Get down there. I think we have a 33 now." I am talking about a bus stop in the middle of the Town, Capital of Scotland ! Unbelievable ! If you have landed in another European country's capital and you feel so homely, like you are in Thrissur or Kozhikode, it is incredible ! Took 33, took a day pass, and got down at the place where the bus took a deviation from main road. Just walked a bit forward and the next junction glanced at the left side cut road and saw a B&B board. Just gave a try. They had vacancies, and got single rooms and for rent £29. I really got it right when the room was attached and had coffee kettle and other accessories like cups and saucers other than the basic heaters, towels, soaps, shampoo and all. The time was 12:50 by then. Left the luggage and started immediately.Walked back to the Royal Mile. Royal Mile is the main road in Edinburgh old town. Old Town and new town is separated by a bridge with the rail line making the partition. The Royal Mile starts from the Castle and ends in the Palace. It looks it is a mile in length. My road from the hotel cuts the Royal Mile in the middle and it goes on to the bridge and to the new town. On my left side, I have to walk up to the Castle and if I go down the road on my right side, it will take my to the Palace. It was 1:15 when I entered the Royal Mile - a road made of stone, gives you a feeling that you have gone back a century ! Except for the taxis passing thru the road rarely, the road is full of pedestrians, and the air, air is full of music of bagpipe ! May be because Bagpipe has been one of my favorite instruments, I am biased ! But I will really call it an experience ! With both sides on the roads, either souvenir shops or restaurants, passed the Cathedral, and walked to the Castle. The air was full of the bag pipe music due to the piper here and there standing on the corner playing it with the box open for donations. Anyway, you get the music free and it is worth putting 20p or 50p in ! A queue for some 15 mins to enter the Castle. The view of the city from the castle was good, with the sea on one side and snow-filled hills on the other, both at distance. The war museum inside the castle conveyed me the message that the Scotts are proud for being brave and they boast a lot of their military history. I was amazed to find Haider Ali's sword in Castle of Edinburgh. The Scotts also were so much excited about their victory over Tippu. This is the only person I see, featured as a brave man in Windsor castle, British museum and now, here in Edinburgh also ! In Windsor castle, his small machine of a tiger killing an English man , his golden tiger head, and clothes were on display. I have seen his sword and helmets in British museum ! Bought some mementos and done with the castle by 4. One of the main things I bought was a CD of the pipe band. As usual, things are unnecessarily costly. Walked down the Royal Mile to the other end getting in to almost all souvenir shops and mostly coming out empty-handed after using my 80's table !
Reached the other end of the road, the palace- the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Walked past it to the right, I had no idea what is there. I ended up in an open area with the freeway passing through. On my left was a golf course, and in front a hill which has some pedestrian steep path to climb. Climbed half way, and looked back ! The evening Sun shining with his golden cloth and the meadow of the golf course, the houses, and the sea, all looks like a beautiful girl dressed up for a party :) ! Just stood there till the Sun vanished. Then climbed down, walked back to my hotel, had my missed lunch by 7pm - a falafel from a Syrian shop on the way.
I realised how tired I am once back in my room. Just fell flat to wake up only on next morning 7 ! I think I have one more day to go, but don't want to be lengthier than this.
Reached the other end of the road, the palace- the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Walked past it to the right, I had no idea what is there. I ended up in an open area with the freeway passing through. On my left was a golf course, and in front a hill which has some pedestrian steep path to climb. Climbed half way, and looked back ! The evening Sun shining with his golden cloth and the meadow of the golf course, the houses, and the sea, all looks like a beautiful girl dressed up for a party :) ! Just stood there till the Sun vanished. Then climbed down, walked back to my hotel, had my missed lunch by 7pm - a falafel from a Syrian shop on the way.
I realised how tired I am once back in my room. Just fell flat to wake up only on next morning 7 ! I think I have one more day to go, but don't want to be lengthier than this.
Monday, March 01, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 7
Destination : Edinburgh, Capital of Scotland
Onward trip : 28-Feb-2004, Saturday ; 5:55 AM from London Kings X (read as Kings Cross)
Return trip : 01-Mar-2004, Sunday ; 9AM arriving from Edinburgh Waverly
So the plan was to reach the city by 11 and then, finish the visits and stay there for the night( as there was no night trains)
You notice something wrong with the plan? Unfortunately, I didn't. I didn't see that March 1st is Monday and this year Feb. has 29! I realised it on Thursday night! Got a permission from the office comfortably to come late to office on Monday. The problem now is that, I am already lost. I have two choices: Either to cancel the reservations and change the plan, or stay there for two nights instead of one. Anyway I will loose money! If I cancel, I have to pay almost the same amount extra! That is the rule with railways here.
But my sleep took care of making the choice! I slept till 5 and literally ran to get hold of all the buses and tubes I could get, to catch the train. But tubes behave funny on weekends. They cut down the service, close stations, and all that sort of funny things happens! So not to tell more, I missed the train and it was 6:15 by the time I reach the station! I went to the reservation counter to ask what next. The clerk advised me that I can carry on with the journey paying 46 pounds more! So I ended up paying 46 pounds extra for over the original 53 pounds! The only advantage was, I can go in any train and come back in any train. The start was not good, not good at all!
6:45AM: The train for Glasgow via Edinburgh starts with me in coach F, in a left side seat with no one in my aisle seat( till the end of the journey). There is no crowd as usual. The reservation only saves you money, it has nothing to do with availability during these times. This train is supposed to be faster than the one I missed and is expected to reach my destination by 11:33, calling at Peterborough, Durham, York, Newcastle, Berwick-Upon-Tweed etc.( 'calling at' means 'stopping at'). Nearly an hour after the journey started, I could see snowflakes on the way and it starts increasing and when we reached Newcastle, it was some 5-6 inches of snow! The journey has started badly, and now snow is going to complete the episode! But from inside the train, it is a dream scenery with both sides full of snow and snowfall still continuing! You could see all in black and white( because roads are still black and all the rest is white :) ) !
To my surprise, the snow started decreasing and by the time I reached Berwick-upon-Tweed, it was a new Earth and new Sky! I have North sea on my right, and road with meadows and rocks in between the rail and the sea, it was another phase of the beautiful journey, and the sky is clear and it is sunny! The sea continues to be there till Edinburgh.
I was making my plans for making up my loss in the morning. The journey was worth spending that money, but still I need some more to make sure it happened for good. So decided to change my plan. I will start the return journey by Sunday evening, will take train at 5:30 and will be back in London by 10:20. That will save me one day's rent in B&B (Bed & Breakfast). Also, I will be fresh to be back in office after a good sleep than peeping in after a long journey in the middle of the day. The balance sheet matches with the saving in B&B itself will be 30 pound and for the rest 16, I got a memorable journey and with a good sunny day, I can write it off as a bad debt!
The train reached Edinburgh in time. I landed in Edinburgh, no idea what it looks like, how the people will be, where to stay..... the list of issues are still in front of me. All I had was a list of places to be visited, taken from net and some hotels listed in net. The weather forecast report taken from net was positive with sunny days, but may be the temperature will drop to negatives at night. But no snow was predicted.
With all those issues in front of me, I will stop for this week.
Onward trip : 28-Feb-2004, Saturday ; 5:55 AM from London Kings X (read as Kings Cross)
Return trip : 01-Mar-2004, Sunday ; 9AM arriving from Edinburgh Waverly
So the plan was to reach the city by 11 and then, finish the visits and stay there for the night( as there was no night trains)
You notice something wrong with the plan? Unfortunately, I didn't. I didn't see that March 1st is Monday and this year Feb. has 29! I realised it on Thursday night! Got a permission from the office comfortably to come late to office on Monday. The problem now is that, I am already lost. I have two choices: Either to cancel the reservations and change the plan, or stay there for two nights instead of one. Anyway I will loose money! If I cancel, I have to pay almost the same amount extra! That is the rule with railways here.
But my sleep took care of making the choice! I slept till 5 and literally ran to get hold of all the buses and tubes I could get, to catch the train. But tubes behave funny on weekends. They cut down the service, close stations, and all that sort of funny things happens! So not to tell more, I missed the train and it was 6:15 by the time I reach the station! I went to the reservation counter to ask what next. The clerk advised me that I can carry on with the journey paying 46 pounds more! So I ended up paying 46 pounds extra for over the original 53 pounds! The only advantage was, I can go in any train and come back in any train. The start was not good, not good at all!
6:45AM: The train for Glasgow via Edinburgh starts with me in coach F, in a left side seat with no one in my aisle seat( till the end of the journey). There is no crowd as usual. The reservation only saves you money, it has nothing to do with availability during these times. This train is supposed to be faster than the one I missed and is expected to reach my destination by 11:33, calling at Peterborough, Durham, York, Newcastle, Berwick-Upon-Tweed etc.( 'calling at' means 'stopping at'). Nearly an hour after the journey started, I could see snowflakes on the way and it starts increasing and when we reached Newcastle, it was some 5-6 inches of snow! The journey has started badly, and now snow is going to complete the episode! But from inside the train, it is a dream scenery with both sides full of snow and snowfall still continuing! You could see all in black and white( because roads are still black and all the rest is white :) ) !
To my surprise, the snow started decreasing and by the time I reached Berwick-upon-Tweed, it was a new Earth and new Sky! I have North sea on my right, and road with meadows and rocks in between the rail and the sea, it was another phase of the beautiful journey, and the sky is clear and it is sunny! The sea continues to be there till Edinburgh.
I was making my plans for making up my loss in the morning. The journey was worth spending that money, but still I need some more to make sure it happened for good. So decided to change my plan. I will start the return journey by Sunday evening, will take train at 5:30 and will be back in London by 10:20. That will save me one day's rent in B&B (Bed & Breakfast). Also, I will be fresh to be back in office after a good sleep than peeping in after a long journey in the middle of the day. The balance sheet matches with the saving in B&B itself will be 30 pound and for the rest 16, I got a memorable journey and with a good sunny day, I can write it off as a bad debt!
The train reached Edinburgh in time. I landed in Edinburgh, no idea what it looks like, how the people will be, where to stay..... the list of issues are still in front of me. All I had was a list of places to be visited, taken from net and some hotels listed in net. The weather forecast report taken from net was positive with sunny days, but may be the temperature will drop to negatives at night. But no snow was predicted.
With all those issues in front of me, I will stop for this week.
Monday, February 23, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 6
London is getting more cooler and life is getting more tougher, I mean the weekends.
But now, let me finish my Stratford trip before speaking about theRoyal castle of Windsor.
14-Feb-2003. 2:46PM - The train arrived. A diesel engine train with 3-4 coaches. This is another fact I noticed with surprise. Most of the places the lines are not electrified. The trains are not more than 8 coaches long, that too very long distance express trains. The goods services, even though, are lengthy as in India, with 30-40 wagons attached. So the platforms of most small stations are very short.
3:18 PM : Got down at Warwick station. Just imagine you get down at a small station like the Malgudi described by R K Narayan. It has a posture of the Warwick castle in the public notice board and there is one more notice board which says about all the trains stopping in the station with timings.
The weather which was becoming cloudy when I started from Stratford, is slowly progressing to light drizzle ! Had a tough time walking to the castle up the hill in rain, with a three-fold St. George umbrella which is protesting against the wind. Reached the hill top, saw the castle from outside, I felt it was a glorification to show about the castle as this and that. Entry fee of 12.50 pound seems a bit high for me, and photography was prohibited in the inner areas of the castle and it was raining in the open areas. So I had no second thoughts. Walked back to the station to get the next train to Leamington Spa and then get a connection to Oxford.
4:29 PM : Even though I reached the station by 4, I had to wait half an hour to get the next train. It dropped me in Leamington within 10 mins. And luckily got a connection also immediately. Reached Oxford at 5:30. It was dark already and so I lost all the chance to take some snaps unless the university is lighted properly. I walked to the University
centre. It is a university campus, the whole town. Imagine we had arailways station and bus stand with all super markets, pubs, and traffic in a college campus, that is Oxford ! The rash road crossers, the unpredictable cyclists, a huge cycle stand in the railway station, groups of young people standing here and there, I think we can call it a campus Town !
I found the University memento store also closed ! So bad luck ! Found a store where I bought some postcards of the picture of the University and some popular photos of the town.
6:45 PM: Got a direct train to London Paddington station, took Hammersmith tube home by 9:30. The day was tiring and the weather conditions have made it worse. I cancelled the plan to visit Windsor on Sunday.
The trip was memorable in the sense I was feeling like a dream when the train passed through the routes which I had seen in TV when they show Tour de France. The beautiful houses in between the greenery, the small townships with rows of houses passing like an army parade, the chapel like a flag man, a small stream, a wooden bow bridge across it, every single sight is a postcard !
But now, let me finish my Stratford trip before speaking about theRoyal castle of Windsor.
14-Feb-2003. 2:46PM - The train arrived. A diesel engine train with 3-4 coaches. This is another fact I noticed with surprise. Most of the places the lines are not electrified. The trains are not more than 8 coaches long, that too very long distance express trains. The goods services, even though, are lengthy as in India, with 30-40 wagons attached. So the platforms of most small stations are very short.
3:18 PM : Got down at Warwick station. Just imagine you get down at a small station like the Malgudi described by R K Narayan. It has a posture of the Warwick castle in the public notice board and there is one more notice board which says about all the trains stopping in the station with timings.
The weather which was becoming cloudy when I started from Stratford, is slowly progressing to light drizzle ! Had a tough time walking to the castle up the hill in rain, with a three-fold St. George umbrella which is protesting against the wind. Reached the hill top, saw the castle from outside, I felt it was a glorification to show about the castle as this and that. Entry fee of 12.50 pound seems a bit high for me, and photography was prohibited in the inner areas of the castle and it was raining in the open areas. So I had no second thoughts. Walked back to the station to get the next train to Leamington Spa and then get a connection to Oxford.
4:29 PM : Even though I reached the station by 4, I had to wait half an hour to get the next train. It dropped me in Leamington within 10 mins. And luckily got a connection also immediately. Reached Oxford at 5:30. It was dark already and so I lost all the chance to take some snaps unless the university is lighted properly. I walked to the University
centre. It is a university campus, the whole town. Imagine we had arailways station and bus stand with all super markets, pubs, and traffic in a college campus, that is Oxford ! The rash road crossers, the unpredictable cyclists, a huge cycle stand in the railway station, groups of young people standing here and there, I think we can call it a campus Town !
I found the University memento store also closed ! So bad luck ! Found a store where I bought some postcards of the picture of the University and some popular photos of the town.
6:45 PM: Got a direct train to London Paddington station, took Hammersmith tube home by 9:30. The day was tiring and the weather conditions have made it worse. I cancelled the plan to visit Windsor on Sunday.
The trip was memorable in the sense I was feeling like a dream when the train passed through the routes which I had seen in TV when they show Tour de France. The beautiful houses in between the greenery, the small townships with rows of houses passing like an army parade, the chapel like a flag man, a small stream, a wooden bow bridge across it, every single sight is a postcard !
Wednesday, February 18, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 5
I know I am skipping some weekends' description to the ones which are more eventful and recent.
Date : 14-Feb-2004
Plan : To start from home by 5, catch Thames Rail train at 6:18 to Stratford-Upon-Avon, the birthplace of Shakespeare. Go around there till afternoon, start back and get down at Oxford by evening 4 and just visit the University and campus. Start back by 7 and reach London by 8:30.
Team : Me and my favourite Nikon.
All plans end when the war begins. And when I plan to start from home at 5, I think the plan has already failed !
5:10am : Got up ! Realised that I have to make it today. Got ready and started by 6 after a bread toast for breakfast. Got a bus from White horse junction, to East Ham tube station and waited for a tube till 6:25which dropped me at Paddington by 7.
7:10am : I got through the counter to get an offpeak-standard return ticket to Stratford for 23pounds. The person at the counter informed me that I have to wait till 9:18 for the next train even if I am ready to change the trains.
7:13am : Went to the information counter with my print out of the plans taken from net and there was a working plan with a train at 7:15. The person at the counter said it is possible and asked me to run to the train going to Temple from Platform no. 3. Just made it. And thus started my trip.
The train was more luxurious than the ones I have seen before in UK. It was running at a very speed, with not a small shake inside. I was supposed to get down at 'Reading'. According to the plan on my print out, it reached Reading by 7:40. Now my next train will take me to Birmingham. Waited for it in the same Platform till 8:05. The platform was clean and tidy with lot of cigarette bits, empty cups etc. The only thing missing was the litter. I also contributed to it by throwing my cup after having a coffee from the automatic coffee machine. I swear, I looked for dustbins before doing that !
8:05 am : My train to Birmingham arrived. It is going to Glasgow, the biggest city in Scotland. It was more luxurious than my previous one, with a small snack and publications shop with a cafeteria. It had personal music points like in the flight
and above all, a small panel on the top where it was displayed whether the seat is
reserved , and if reserved from what place till what place ! I had not noticed it till
the announcement came to look at it before you sit and sat on a window seat which was reserved from Oxford. My aisle seat was unreserved. Placed my jacket there. Till Oxford I can enjoy the country side scene from the window seat.
The journey started with an apology for being 5 mins late ! The daylight is on. The
beautiful countryside in front of me ! Like there is no ugly mother, there is no country
side in the World which is not beautiful. It was fully green, with a small settlement in
the middle dominated by a Chapel, and again it is vacant beautiful land. Then, you
find here and there, some huge farm house or ware houses, and you can see sheep or horses near them.
8:30am : It reached the first stop, Oxford. I just waited for someone to come and ask me to leave his seat. A young man came and saw the panel above me, I was about to stand. He told me he doesn't like window seats and so better he will seat in my aisle seat ! He thanked me too for that ! He is doing his Ph.D in Maths at Oxford and is going back to his home in Coventry.He sat back with some papers on Fourier coefficients.The train stopped at Banbury and Leamington Spa. The gentleman next to me got down saying Bye at Coventry. The journey is on with beautiful scene on your window passing by.
9:45am : Train reached Birmingham. I got down and looked at my print out plan. Next stage is a walk to the Snow hill station from the main station from where I will get a train to my destination at 10:25. I had no idea where this Snow Hill station is. Asked some two three people, all showed some directions and I couldn't understand anything in their local accent. Some protesters were shouting slogans and shouting at people getting into the station. There were a handful of police officers accompanying them. I just took my camera out and hung it in my shoulder and that did the trick. They just gave a smile to me and gave a 'Hi'. Asking someone outside the station, he told me to follow the protesters and they are going to the Snow hill station. I blindly walked with them. Took sometime in between to stop at a place where I think it is the town centre, to take a snap of the main Cathedral and the meadow in front. Reached the station by 10:05.
10:25am: It was a local train to pick me from Birmingham to Stratford. It stopped in all the stops every 2mins and dropped me at Stratford by 11:35. A small station like the local stations in India. Walked out, saw the map, took notes and walked towards the birthplace of Shakespeare. Just happened to pass through a village market, got in and took some snaps of the sellers which are really unique with their costume and appearance. People are more happy, wishing each other, and a smile on everyone's
face. You will, in no time, fall in love with the place.
Walked to the house where Shakespeare was born. Took some snaps, bought some
souvenirs, walked to the river Avon's banks. It was a beautiful sight, no words can
express it completely ! Walked through the banks of the river for more than an hour and
I am done. I felt my money is paid off. I can now go back home and sit at home for the
whole weekend ! The peace which Big Ben or Trafalgar can't give, this peaceful, merry
place gives you ! You have crowd here also. But this crowd has time, it has all the time
in the World to help you, to tell you about the places.
I met an old lady at a signal struggling to cross the road. I just stopped to offer her a
helping hand and we parted. Later she found me in front of a village map, she stopped
and taught me all the places to see ! A sudden change of atmosphere !
Again, I looked for a McD for my lunch, had it and walked back to the station by 2:30.
Surprises waits for the fools, always ! And the good thing is, sometimes they are pleasant! I was just checking the route I have to go back through. I was to take a train to Leamington Spa checking the stations in between, I saw the station Warwick ! The place where is situated the castle which is voted by BBC as the best in UK !
Just confirmed with the officer in the station that I can take enough breaks on the journey and get down at Warwick. May be that will delay my visit at Oxford, but it is worth. The next fear was whether I will get the connection trains properly as these
are all villages and you may not be lucky enough on a weekend to find enough trains !
I will stop at this point. Will continue next week as it is getting too long. I know I will
lag a little more, with my next week plans to Windsor and Leeds may have to wait for
some more days to be written down.
It is 8:30 here now. I am the only person sitting in the office writing this mail. This is
because I am fully busy till 7 everyday. It will a great pleasure for me if I can get some comments on the above, if not at least please don't ask me have you got no work to do.
Date : 14-Feb-2004
Plan : To start from home by 5, catch Thames Rail train at 6:18 to Stratford-Upon-Avon, the birthplace of Shakespeare. Go around there till afternoon, start back and get down at Oxford by evening 4 and just visit the University and campus. Start back by 7 and reach London by 8:30.
Team : Me and my favourite Nikon.
All plans end when the war begins. And when I plan to start from home at 5, I think the plan has already failed !
5:10am : Got up ! Realised that I have to make it today. Got ready and started by 6 after a bread toast for breakfast. Got a bus from White horse junction, to East Ham tube station and waited for a tube till 6:25which dropped me at Paddington by 7.
7:10am : I got through the counter to get an offpeak-standard return ticket to Stratford for 23pounds. The person at the counter informed me that I have to wait till 9:18 for the next train even if I am ready to change the trains.
7:13am : Went to the information counter with my print out of the plans taken from net and there was a working plan with a train at 7:15. The person at the counter said it is possible and asked me to run to the train going to Temple from Platform no. 3. Just made it. And thus started my trip.
The train was more luxurious than the ones I have seen before in UK. It was running at a very speed, with not a small shake inside. I was supposed to get down at 'Reading'. According to the plan on my print out, it reached Reading by 7:40. Now my next train will take me to Birmingham. Waited for it in the same Platform till 8:05. The platform was clean and tidy with lot of cigarette bits, empty cups etc. The only thing missing was the litter. I also contributed to it by throwing my cup after having a coffee from the automatic coffee machine. I swear, I looked for dustbins before doing that !
8:05 am : My train to Birmingham arrived. It is going to Glasgow, the biggest city in Scotland. It was more luxurious than my previous one, with a small snack and publications shop with a cafeteria. It had personal music points like in the flight
and above all, a small panel on the top where it was displayed whether the seat is
reserved , and if reserved from what place till what place ! I had not noticed it till
the announcement came to look at it before you sit and sat on a window seat which was reserved from Oxford. My aisle seat was unreserved. Placed my jacket there. Till Oxford I can enjoy the country side scene from the window seat.
The journey started with an apology for being 5 mins late ! The daylight is on. The
beautiful countryside in front of me ! Like there is no ugly mother, there is no country
side in the World which is not beautiful. It was fully green, with a small settlement in
the middle dominated by a Chapel, and again it is vacant beautiful land. Then, you
find here and there, some huge farm house or ware houses, and you can see sheep or horses near them.
8:30am : It reached the first stop, Oxford. I just waited for someone to come and ask me to leave his seat. A young man came and saw the panel above me, I was about to stand. He told me he doesn't like window seats and so better he will seat in my aisle seat ! He thanked me too for that ! He is doing his Ph.D in Maths at Oxford and is going back to his home in Coventry.He sat back with some papers on Fourier coefficients.The train stopped at Banbury and Leamington Spa. The gentleman next to me got down saying Bye at Coventry. The journey is on with beautiful scene on your window passing by.
9:45am : Train reached Birmingham. I got down and looked at my print out plan. Next stage is a walk to the Snow hill station from the main station from where I will get a train to my destination at 10:25. I had no idea where this Snow Hill station is. Asked some two three people, all showed some directions and I couldn't understand anything in their local accent. Some protesters were shouting slogans and shouting at people getting into the station. There were a handful of police officers accompanying them. I just took my camera out and hung it in my shoulder and that did the trick. They just gave a smile to me and gave a 'Hi'. Asking someone outside the station, he told me to follow the protesters and they are going to the Snow hill station. I blindly walked with them. Took sometime in between to stop at a place where I think it is the town centre, to take a snap of the main Cathedral and the meadow in front. Reached the station by 10:05.
10:25am: It was a local train to pick me from Birmingham to Stratford. It stopped in all the stops every 2mins and dropped me at Stratford by 11:35. A small station like the local stations in India. Walked out, saw the map, took notes and walked towards the birthplace of Shakespeare. Just happened to pass through a village market, got in and took some snaps of the sellers which are really unique with their costume and appearance. People are more happy, wishing each other, and a smile on everyone's
face. You will, in no time, fall in love with the place.
Walked to the house where Shakespeare was born. Took some snaps, bought some
souvenirs, walked to the river Avon's banks. It was a beautiful sight, no words can
express it completely ! Walked through the banks of the river for more than an hour and
I am done. I felt my money is paid off. I can now go back home and sit at home for the
whole weekend ! The peace which Big Ben or Trafalgar can't give, this peaceful, merry
place gives you ! You have crowd here also. But this crowd has time, it has all the time
in the World to help you, to tell you about the places.
I met an old lady at a signal struggling to cross the road. I just stopped to offer her a
helping hand and we parted. Later she found me in front of a village map, she stopped
and taught me all the places to see ! A sudden change of atmosphere !
Again, I looked for a McD for my lunch, had it and walked back to the station by 2:30.
Surprises waits for the fools, always ! And the good thing is, sometimes they are pleasant! I was just checking the route I have to go back through. I was to take a train to Leamington Spa checking the stations in between, I saw the station Warwick ! The place where is situated the castle which is voted by BBC as the best in UK !
Just confirmed with the officer in the station that I can take enough breaks on the journey and get down at Warwick. May be that will delay my visit at Oxford, but it is worth. The next fear was whether I will get the connection trains properly as these
are all villages and you may not be lucky enough on a weekend to find enough trains !
I will stop at this point. Will continue next week as it is getting too long. I know I will
lag a little more, with my next week plans to Windsor and Leeds may have to wait for
some more days to be written down.
It is 8:30 here now. I am the only person sitting in the office writing this mail. This is
because I am fully busy till 7 everyday. It will a great pleasure for me if I can get some comments on the above, if not at least please don't ask me have you got no work to do.
Tuesday, February 10, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 4
Life is hectic here during working days. I am happy that I am able to write one and sent by Tuesday. It makes me sit until 9 at night.
I think I should tell something, which will just give a brief idea of the transport and currency.
Pounds come in currency notes of £50, £20, £10 and £5. The £20 and £50 are broader than our currency notes and doesn't fit in to our purse by width. But they are short in length. The coins starts with £2, £1 pound and then, 50p(pence), 20p,10p,5p,2p and 1 penny.
£2 coins has inner circle made of nickel surrounded by bronze. £1exactly matches our 5 rupee coin in dimensions, the only difference is, it is made of bronze. This is vastly used for telephone booths, and many other auto payments. If our 5 rupee could work here, it will be really great ! 50p,20p,and 10p are nickel. 50p is the input for chocolate machines. 5p, 2p and 1p are brass. They normally don't have any value, but you will get back the change correct to 1p. Like South Africa, here also I have never heard a person saying I don't have change nor seen anybody rounding off the amount.
The public transport system is, as you may have heard, excellent ! It is costly, and to travel the same distance in the same tube, it is different ! London is divided mainly in to 6 zones, with zone 1 as the
central London where you have everything, from Wax Museum, Tower Bridge, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace to the banks, other museums and important places. zone 2 to 6 becomes concentric circles around zone1. If you travel to, from or through zone 1 in a tube, you will have to pay £2 for a trip ! It becomes lesser for all the other zones. You have daily,weekly, weekend, monthly passes, which you can go for the zones you want. With a valid pass in a tube, you can travel in a of the bus service inside London ! Most of the buses are double-decker buses. All the buses are single man operated. The driver collects the tickets/verifies the pass while you get in through the front door. He controls the opening and closing of the exit door in the middle of the bus and entry door. If the bus is too crowded, he will stop in front of you and open the exit door, people get down and he closes it. I have not seen anyone peeping in through the exit door.
Still there are some old style double decker buses operated with a driver and conductor, in central London. They are the same as the ones in Trivandrum, Chennai or Mumbai. You can jump and or out anytime. It is more apt for central London as the traffic moves very slow. For buses, they have taken out the zone concept. Anywhere in London for a trip, it is £1.
There are enough of cars on the road in spite of very high parking charges and high fuel prices. It averages from £2.5 per hour to park in the road side and petrol/diesel costs around 75p per litre ! People prefer tubes to buses as you don't know when you will reach the destination in a bus. But as we all know, the network of buses will be more efficient than any rail network.
I have a pass for zone 2 and 3 which costs £48 per month. During weekends, my travel will be more in zone1 and so will go for a weekend pass which will cost £7 and allows to travel free for two days in all 1,2,3,4 zones.
The distant rail system amazed me with the infrastructure these people have. There are more than 10 rail stations situated around London. No British rail will drop you in the central London. I will clarify. All these rail stations are built with a tube station in the border of zone1. Each station has its own set of destinations and each are like our Chennai central with some 10 platforms at least ! So if you want to go to Oxford, the train starts from paddington and if you want to go to Cambridge, it is Liverpool Street and so on. The passes are valid in the British rail for the trains that travel till end of zone 6. The comparison of British rail and tube are very easy : just like our normal trains and electric suburb trains. Here the only difference is, all is closed air-conditioned and is as costly as our air-conditioned coaches are. But the rates are very flexible and you will get a good deal if you know the system and plan your journey.
But what I appreciate is people love to walk here. I am walking with a crowd anywhere in Central London. You can see long queues for Wax museum and London Eye on all weekends.
Again, I find a lot of India here. People don't have time and suddenly you will find a person who has all the time in the World to help you. If you are not that lucky, may be the person who is ready to help you to show your way to an address will be a drunkard who is wandering around because he couldn't find his own house ! I am not joking, it happened to me first thing landing in London. I was wandering with all my luggage in Victoria at night 11 and got only a drunkard who came to me and asked me 'Can I help you ?'. I got the address of the hotel I had booked from the airport and then, had everything I have with me- including the traveler’s cheque ! So I realised then, London is safe at 11 if you are in Victoria; even if the streets are empty. That is all for now.
I think I should tell something, which will just give a brief idea of the transport and currency.
Pounds come in currency notes of £50, £20, £10 and £5. The £20 and £50 are broader than our currency notes and doesn't fit in to our purse by width. But they are short in length. The coins starts with £2, £1 pound and then, 50p(pence), 20p,10p,5p,2p and 1 penny.
£2 coins has inner circle made of nickel surrounded by bronze. £1exactly matches our 5 rupee coin in dimensions, the only difference is, it is made of bronze. This is vastly used for telephone booths, and many other auto payments. If our 5 rupee could work here, it will be really great ! 50p,20p,and 10p are nickel. 50p is the input for chocolate machines. 5p, 2p and 1p are brass. They normally don't have any value, but you will get back the change correct to 1p. Like South Africa, here also I have never heard a person saying I don't have change nor seen anybody rounding off the amount.
The public transport system is, as you may have heard, excellent ! It is costly, and to travel the same distance in the same tube, it is different ! London is divided mainly in to 6 zones, with zone 1 as the
central London where you have everything, from Wax Museum, Tower Bridge, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace to the banks, other museums and important places. zone 2 to 6 becomes concentric circles around zone1. If you travel to, from or through zone 1 in a tube, you will have to pay £2 for a trip ! It becomes lesser for all the other zones. You have daily,weekly, weekend, monthly passes, which you can go for the zones you want. With a valid pass in a tube, you can travel in a of the bus service inside London ! Most of the buses are double-decker buses. All the buses are single man operated. The driver collects the tickets/verifies the pass while you get in through the front door. He controls the opening and closing of the exit door in the middle of the bus and entry door. If the bus is too crowded, he will stop in front of you and open the exit door, people get down and he closes it. I have not seen anyone peeping in through the exit door.
Still there are some old style double decker buses operated with a driver and conductor, in central London. They are the same as the ones in Trivandrum, Chennai or Mumbai. You can jump and or out anytime. It is more apt for central London as the traffic moves very slow. For buses, they have taken out the zone concept. Anywhere in London for a trip, it is £1.
There are enough of cars on the road in spite of very high parking charges and high fuel prices. It averages from £2.5 per hour to park in the road side and petrol/diesel costs around 75p per litre ! People prefer tubes to buses as you don't know when you will reach the destination in a bus. But as we all know, the network of buses will be more efficient than any rail network.
I have a pass for zone 2 and 3 which costs £48 per month. During weekends, my travel will be more in zone1 and so will go for a weekend pass which will cost £7 and allows to travel free for two days in all 1,2,3,4 zones.
The distant rail system amazed me with the infrastructure these people have. There are more than 10 rail stations situated around London. No British rail will drop you in the central London. I will clarify. All these rail stations are built with a tube station in the border of zone1. Each station has its own set of destinations and each are like our Chennai central with some 10 platforms at least ! So if you want to go to Oxford, the train starts from paddington and if you want to go to Cambridge, it is Liverpool Street and so on. The passes are valid in the British rail for the trains that travel till end of zone 6. The comparison of British rail and tube are very easy : just like our normal trains and electric suburb trains. Here the only difference is, all is closed air-conditioned and is as costly as our air-conditioned coaches are. But the rates are very flexible and you will get a good deal if you know the system and plan your journey.
But what I appreciate is people love to walk here. I am walking with a crowd anywhere in Central London. You can see long queues for Wax museum and London Eye on all weekends.
Again, I find a lot of India here. People don't have time and suddenly you will find a person who has all the time in the World to help you. If you are not that lucky, may be the person who is ready to help you to show your way to an address will be a drunkard who is wandering around because he couldn't find his own house ! I am not joking, it happened to me first thing landing in London. I was wandering with all my luggage in Victoria at night 11 and got only a drunkard who came to me and asked me 'Can I help you ?'. I got the address of the hotel I had booked from the airport and then, had everything I have with me- including the traveler’s cheque ! So I realised then, London is safe at 11 if you are in Victoria; even if the streets are empty. That is all for now.
Monday, February 02, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 3
"Pee pe pe pee pe
Pee pe pe pee pe
Pee pe pe pee pe
Pe pe pe pe.... .........This is London.......( the song continues)... 18 hour Greenwich Mean Time BBC World Service..............(and it goes on).... "
This is what I have heard tuning to the BBC news at 11:30pm IST. Greenwich is something very synonymously comes with London, something the English have given to the World - a standard to follow. When it is 13mins past an hour in Greenwich, it is 13 mins past some hour in the rest of the World (or 13 minutes past half an hour)!
I wanted to make sure I don't become a fool like asking Amazon in South Africa, here. So carefully looked in to web and then maps to make sure that Greenwich is here in England and it is very near to central London. You have local tube to Greenwich it is that near!
My destination was Greenwich on last Sunday ( I know I am lagging a week, but I am making notes in my diary that I will not miss anything nor will pack everything in one mail). I got down at Canary Wharf to take a DLR (Dockland Light Rail) tube to Greenwich. The information on the way, the announcement on the earlier tubes, none told me that DLR is closed for maintenance! I saw the station closed with a board in front saying alternate arrangements are been made with special replacement bus services. Walked to the bus stop as directed in the map attached with the notice.
Got a bus after waiting for some 20 mins. It dropped me in Island gardens, just some 500 metres away from Greenwich. I can see Greenwich Royal Observatory on the top of a hill on the other side of Thames! A beautiful sight! I would have missed this if I had come by the tube, which will drop me in Greenwich itself!
Crossed Thames through an underground tunnel some 200 meters long, built in 1919 ! A good experience!
Climbed the hill, nice views of London from there. The Canary Wharf buildings were projecting out of the city view. Canary Wharf is known as the 'Manhattan of London'. Took some snaps standing on zero degree line, the clock that sets the time for the World, the standard measures of 1foot, 2 foot and inches.
The sky was cloudy and it was getting more cooler. The biggest problem with the winter is its connection to the 'bladder'. Your priority slowly changes to finding a toilet, whether you are standing in front of London bridge or Big Ben or Greenwich Observatory! You look for the sign board and the funniest thing here is, I follow the sign boards and after 10 mins of walk, the next signboard shows the arrow in opposite direction! I do not know whether they mean the open space :)!
It was 4:30 by the time I came down and was really hungry when I realized I have skipped lunch. Tried an Indian restaurant in Greenwich (the waiters were speaking some funny language which does not belong to even any neighbours of India! ), named 'Taste of India'. A peshwari naan, bindi masala with a Mango lassi cost me £7 ! I had to pay that buggar 50p tip also! Took a DD back to Canada Water and then took my usual Jubilee and District lines to reach back home by 7.
That was my last weekend coming to an end. What is our perception of the people here ? The people who are punctual, who insist on cleanliness, who has taught the World manners, who introduced etiquette, and what not......
I think things are not exactly what it seems to be. For punctuality,5-10 mins is allowed for any meeting to be delayed, but for trains and services, they are punctual up to an extent. Perfect !
But coming to the next, I have seen people throw away cigarette bits on the road or on footpath, seen people taking out wet tea bag from the cup straight to the meeting table (that too while in the middle of a meeting), leave behind food, magazines, newspaper etc. in a very bad state in tubes and, in buses and DDs, the situation is worse.
Yesterday, coming back from the central town, two native kids were fighting in the tube, approximately 10-11 years old. They were hitting each other with tins lying on the floor it went on until they got down after five stations. No one seemed to bother. A Chinese guy sitting next to them changed his seat that is all.
What I am saying is it is all the same, the people! It is the same World. I have not seen any difference in what a normal man thinks, let it be anywhere in the World.
Pee pe pe pee pe
Pee pe pe pee pe
Pe pe pe pe.... .........This is London.......( the song continues)... 18 hour Greenwich Mean Time BBC World Service..............(and it goes on).... "
This is what I have heard tuning to the BBC news at 11:30pm IST. Greenwich is something very synonymously comes with London, something the English have given to the World - a standard to follow. When it is 13mins past an hour in Greenwich, it is 13 mins past some hour in the rest of the World (or 13 minutes past half an hour)!
I wanted to make sure I don't become a fool like asking Amazon in South Africa, here. So carefully looked in to web and then maps to make sure that Greenwich is here in England and it is very near to central London. You have local tube to Greenwich it is that near!
My destination was Greenwich on last Sunday ( I know I am lagging a week, but I am making notes in my diary that I will not miss anything nor will pack everything in one mail). I got down at Canary Wharf to take a DLR (Dockland Light Rail) tube to Greenwich. The information on the way, the announcement on the earlier tubes, none told me that DLR is closed for maintenance! I saw the station closed with a board in front saying alternate arrangements are been made with special replacement bus services. Walked to the bus stop as directed in the map attached with the notice.
Got a bus after waiting for some 20 mins. It dropped me in Island gardens, just some 500 metres away from Greenwich. I can see Greenwich Royal Observatory on the top of a hill on the other side of Thames! A beautiful sight! I would have missed this if I had come by the tube, which will drop me in Greenwich itself!
Crossed Thames through an underground tunnel some 200 meters long, built in 1919 ! A good experience!
Climbed the hill, nice views of London from there. The Canary Wharf buildings were projecting out of the city view. Canary Wharf is known as the 'Manhattan of London'. Took some snaps standing on zero degree line, the clock that sets the time for the World, the standard measures of 1foot, 2 foot and inches.
The sky was cloudy and it was getting more cooler. The biggest problem with the winter is its connection to the 'bladder'. Your priority slowly changes to finding a toilet, whether you are standing in front of London bridge or Big Ben or Greenwich Observatory! You look for the sign board and the funniest thing here is, I follow the sign boards and after 10 mins of walk, the next signboard shows the arrow in opposite direction! I do not know whether they mean the open space :)!
It was 4:30 by the time I came down and was really hungry when I realized I have skipped lunch. Tried an Indian restaurant in Greenwich (the waiters were speaking some funny language which does not belong to even any neighbours of India! ), named 'Taste of India'. A peshwari naan, bindi masala with a Mango lassi cost me £7 ! I had to pay that buggar 50p tip also! Took a DD back to Canada Water and then took my usual Jubilee and District lines to reach back home by 7.
That was my last weekend coming to an end. What is our perception of the people here ? The people who are punctual, who insist on cleanliness, who has taught the World manners, who introduced etiquette, and what not......
I think things are not exactly what it seems to be. For punctuality,5-10 mins is allowed for any meeting to be delayed, but for trains and services, they are punctual up to an extent. Perfect !
But coming to the next, I have seen people throw away cigarette bits on the road or on footpath, seen people taking out wet tea bag from the cup straight to the meeting table (that too while in the middle of a meeting), leave behind food, magazines, newspaper etc. in a very bad state in tubes and, in buses and DDs, the situation is worse.
Yesterday, coming back from the central town, two native kids were fighting in the tube, approximately 10-11 years old. They were hitting each other with tins lying on the floor it went on until they got down after five stations. No one seemed to bother. A Chinese guy sitting next to them changed his seat that is all.
What I am saying is it is all the same, the people! It is the same World. I have not seen any difference in what a normal man thinks, let it be anywhere in the World.
Monday, January 26, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 2
One more weekend is over. Yesterday was a hectic day in office and so the delay. I do not know whether I will have to wait until I go back to Chennai and then write about it as the work is becoming more and more hectic.
I am too lucky to have sunny weekends in this winter, and that too in London! For those of you not heard of London weather, the best thing to compare with it is a woman's mind, you never know when it will change!
It was a new definition for me for the term 'sightseeing trip'. The London sightseeing trip costs £15. It includes a Thames cruise, which will otherwise cost £7. There a five starting points in the city and they go through five different routes. The difference is, a bus will start every 15 minutes from each of the starting points! The ticket is valid for 24
hours from the time you board the bus. Therefore, you can get down at any point, take your time, walk around, come back to the stop, and catch another one, which will be there for every 15 minutes! All are Double Deckers with open top decks! You have a map in your hands and a color code in the bus that distinguishes which route it takes. So, it is your day!
I reached Victoria station by 9:45 and took a red route bus, which covers most of the areas I wanted. I had taken one extra film roll along with my fresh loaded SLR and a recorder walkman. The DD passed through the London streets which are broad enough to contain the traffic, but narrow for me taking a snap of a building in full ! The most used term in the commentary was 'The oldest existing..' or 'The first ever...' and for every building there was something special ! It was a hard time for me resisting myself from taking snaps.
It went through one corner of Hyde Park. It was one of the places I walked through, last weekend and saw some small small crowds centred by a person standing on a platform or a milk tray ! I peeped in, but couldn't follow what was going on. Now I know what is it. This corner used to be a place for executions in olden days. This used to invite a huge crowd. It was a good entertainment for people to see a man's head been chopped off. Before being executed, he was allowed to give a last speech. So the man will air his views before death. The only restriction was he should not talk ill of the Royal family nor should use bad language.
Ages passed, people still come here to air their views. Anybody is allowed to speak on anything, and this area of the big Hyde Park is known as 'Speaker's corner'.
I got down in front of Big Ben by 11. Took enough snaps of Big Ben, the houses of Parliament, Westminster's Abbey (a famous church, where people like Sir Winston Churchill got married), and then decided to walk towards Trafalgar Square. On the way, I saw a crowd gathering near a street. I saw a group of schoolboys and girls in Scottish attire getting ready for a procession or march past. I went in to it and took some snaps of the little bagpipers and three girls gave a smiling pose to my camera! I was feeling like real professional paparazzi! I walked with the parade for sometime and then took a turn when it came to Scotland Yard street (this is old Scotland Yard. The new headquarters we see in News is that of Metropolitan Police/New Scotland Yard).
Finished my lunch, and boarded another red route. It took me through Waterloo, London Bridge and Tower Bridge. Tower Bridge is what we say London Bridge! Actual London Bridge is a normal bridge, which was built very very long ago and another strong one replaced it when it fell down. So when you hear the song 'London Bridge is falling down....' remember, it was an old, normal, wooden bridge and it really fell down.
I got down at Buckingham palace next, and spent sometime around the park nearby. My first roll was already finished! I remember loading the second one while walking with the parade near Trafalgar Square.
It was three by then. I finished the bus trip at Victoria. Took a tube to Waterloo and my plan, get to the Waterloo Pier and take the Thames cruise. I will get the free cruise only if I use it within 24 hours from the start of my sightseeing trip. I had to hurry as it will be dark by five and I should finish blinking my camera before that! I had to walk till Westminster Pier as the Waterloo Pier was closed for maintenance.
A memorable cruise through Thames followed. I saw big Ben, Tower Bridge from Thames. I now repent for not studying the Wordsworth's poems!
The Saturday ended. One more day and I think I need one more weekender to write about it.
London seems to be a museum for future built very well in the past. We should appreciate the vision of the people who foresaw the needs of a city some 100 or 200 years ahead!
I am too lucky to have sunny weekends in this winter, and that too in London! For those of you not heard of London weather, the best thing to compare with it is a woman's mind, you never know when it will change!
It was a new definition for me for the term 'sightseeing trip'. The London sightseeing trip costs £15. It includes a Thames cruise, which will otherwise cost £7. There a five starting points in the city and they go through five different routes. The difference is, a bus will start every 15 minutes from each of the starting points! The ticket is valid for 24
hours from the time you board the bus. Therefore, you can get down at any point, take your time, walk around, come back to the stop, and catch another one, which will be there for every 15 minutes! All are Double Deckers with open top decks! You have a map in your hands and a color code in the bus that distinguishes which route it takes. So, it is your day!
I reached Victoria station by 9:45 and took a red route bus, which covers most of the areas I wanted. I had taken one extra film roll along with my fresh loaded SLR and a recorder walkman. The DD passed through the London streets which are broad enough to contain the traffic, but narrow for me taking a snap of a building in full ! The most used term in the commentary was 'The oldest existing..' or 'The first ever...' and for every building there was something special ! It was a hard time for me resisting myself from taking snaps.
It went through one corner of Hyde Park. It was one of the places I walked through, last weekend and saw some small small crowds centred by a person standing on a platform or a milk tray ! I peeped in, but couldn't follow what was going on. Now I know what is it. This corner used to be a place for executions in olden days. This used to invite a huge crowd. It was a good entertainment for people to see a man's head been chopped off. Before being executed, he was allowed to give a last speech. So the man will air his views before death. The only restriction was he should not talk ill of the Royal family nor should use bad language.
Ages passed, people still come here to air their views. Anybody is allowed to speak on anything, and this area of the big Hyde Park is known as 'Speaker's corner'.
I got down in front of Big Ben by 11. Took enough snaps of Big Ben, the houses of Parliament, Westminster's Abbey (a famous church, where people like Sir Winston Churchill got married), and then decided to walk towards Trafalgar Square. On the way, I saw a crowd gathering near a street. I saw a group of schoolboys and girls in Scottish attire getting ready for a procession or march past. I went in to it and took some snaps of the little bagpipers and three girls gave a smiling pose to my camera! I was feeling like real professional paparazzi! I walked with the parade for sometime and then took a turn when it came to Scotland Yard street (this is old Scotland Yard. The new headquarters we see in News is that of Metropolitan Police/New Scotland Yard).
Finished my lunch, and boarded another red route. It took me through Waterloo, London Bridge and Tower Bridge. Tower Bridge is what we say London Bridge! Actual London Bridge is a normal bridge, which was built very very long ago and another strong one replaced it when it fell down. So when you hear the song 'London Bridge is falling down....' remember, it was an old, normal, wooden bridge and it really fell down.
I got down at Buckingham palace next, and spent sometime around the park nearby. My first roll was already finished! I remember loading the second one while walking with the parade near Trafalgar Square.
It was three by then. I finished the bus trip at Victoria. Took a tube to Waterloo and my plan, get to the Waterloo Pier and take the Thames cruise. I will get the free cruise only if I use it within 24 hours from the start of my sightseeing trip. I had to hurry as it will be dark by five and I should finish blinking my camera before that! I had to walk till Westminster Pier as the Waterloo Pier was closed for maintenance.
A memorable cruise through Thames followed. I saw big Ben, Tower Bridge from Thames. I now repent for not studying the Wordsworth's poems!
The Saturday ended. One more day and I think I need one more weekender to write about it.
London seems to be a museum for future built very well in the past. We should appreciate the vision of the people who foresaw the needs of a city some 100 or 200 years ahead!
Monday, January 19, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER 1
My first weekend is through in London and I have a lot to write too! The last time I heard Oxford, Piccadilly, Trafalgar Square, Park view, Mayfair etc. were in the MONOPOLY game, which we use to play in the school days. Now they are all in the map in front of me. And my tube pass can take me anywhere.
On Saturday, I underestimated the cold and went out with just a sweater or may be I overestimated my power to withstand the cold. Started by around 11. Took a weekend pass for £7, which will allow you to travel in tube in main four zones of London for Sat and Sun. I have a monthly pass for zone 2 and zone 3. But the main places in London are in zone 1.
I took district line tube and got down at Tower Hill station. Came out of the station to find myself in a dream land. I was surrounded by building of Victorian architecture, and I couldn't afford to take them all in my camera. I walked to the Tower of London. I think I will tell about it later. It is in the banks of Thames and the Tower Bridge is very close to the Tower of London. Tower Bridge is what we have heard and seen in photos as London Bridge. The actual London Bridge is 20 years ago and I never have bothered to see it. It was a sunny day. But still I couldn't manage with a sweater. So bought some small maps of Central London, and souvenirs, I decided to go back. The day ended by 2.
Sunday, I prepared well. Out with everything I had, a sweater, a jacket and wool gloves, and I was full ready to beat the weather. Thank God that it was sunny too. I made my plan. The time was again 11. Took the District lines tube to Mile End and then changed to Central Lines tube, got down at Oxford circus. It is a shopping area with full weekend crowd. Walked in a direction I felt good. Reached some park after 30 mins and it was Hyde Park. Then walked a bit more, had a meal in McDonalds. That look to be the cheapest place where you will get a Veg:Burger, Juice and large chips for £3.49.
Again started walking, through the same road to Oxford Circus and then walked to Piccadilly Circus. My camera was blinking at times and I realized I made a big mistake forgetting to take an extra roll. A roll costs £5.99 here! From Piccadilly Circus again, I walked through some streets, which looked busy with cinemas theatres, drama theatres, on both sides; and then, I reached a fantastic place. It was a round similar to something like what I have seen in photographs. I asked one of the people around, where I am, very politely. I knew it was something I should know. He replied, 'Trafalgar Square'!
It was an amazing moment. The time was around 4pm, but started looking like six. I climbed the steps of National Gallery to get a view of the Square from there. I could not believe my eyes! Big Ben was in sight some 200 meters from there. The only sad thing was, my camera had one more film to go. I decided to click it anyway - a view of Big Ben from National Gallery, with Trafalgar Square included! Now I was like a soldier with no bullets, in front of an army with no guns! I slowly walked towards Big Ben, crossed Thames in front of the Big Ben and turned back in the middle of the middle. I think I have never been lost in my life like this! I had a huge square prism in front of me, with house of Parliaments just besides it. The sky was so beautiful and all made it a beautiful sight to be captured in camera. Walked to the other side and enjoyed the same sitting on a wooden chair on the other side of Thames. I will not forget this evening in my life! Big Ben rang 4:30, 4:45 and 5 too! I was there just amazingly watching at something I have never seen before!
It is dark by five, just went down the steps in front of Big Ben to Westminster tube. Took District line to get down at East Ham and walked back home. Bought three calling cards to India - it is cheaper to call India with the cards than making a local call from a public booth! Funny World!
I will elaborate on each of the places later. The only other amazing fact I left out was, entering a malayalee shop in the middle of Oxford circus selling bags and luggage - A Siddique from Kasaragod to be precise!
On Saturday, I underestimated the cold and went out with just a sweater or may be I overestimated my power to withstand the cold. Started by around 11. Took a weekend pass for £7, which will allow you to travel in tube in main four zones of London for Sat and Sun. I have a monthly pass for zone 2 and zone 3. But the main places in London are in zone 1.
I took district line tube and got down at Tower Hill station. Came out of the station to find myself in a dream land. I was surrounded by building of Victorian architecture, and I couldn't afford to take them all in my camera. I walked to the Tower of London. I think I will tell about it later. It is in the banks of Thames and the Tower Bridge is very close to the Tower of London. Tower Bridge is what we have heard and seen in photos as London Bridge. The actual London Bridge is 20 years ago and I never have bothered to see it. It was a sunny day. But still I couldn't manage with a sweater. So bought some small maps of Central London, and souvenirs, I decided to go back. The day ended by 2.
Sunday, I prepared well. Out with everything I had, a sweater, a jacket and wool gloves, and I was full ready to beat the weather. Thank God that it was sunny too. I made my plan. The time was again 11. Took the District lines tube to Mile End and then changed to Central Lines tube, got down at Oxford circus. It is a shopping area with full weekend crowd. Walked in a direction I felt good. Reached some park after 30 mins and it was Hyde Park. Then walked a bit more, had a meal in McDonalds. That look to be the cheapest place where you will get a Veg:Burger, Juice and large chips for £3.49.
Again started walking, through the same road to Oxford Circus and then walked to Piccadilly Circus. My camera was blinking at times and I realized I made a big mistake forgetting to take an extra roll. A roll costs £5.99 here! From Piccadilly Circus again, I walked through some streets, which looked busy with cinemas theatres, drama theatres, on both sides; and then, I reached a fantastic place. It was a round similar to something like what I have seen in photographs. I asked one of the people around, where I am, very politely. I knew it was something I should know. He replied, 'Trafalgar Square'!
It was an amazing moment. The time was around 4pm, but started looking like six. I climbed the steps of National Gallery to get a view of the Square from there. I could not believe my eyes! Big Ben was in sight some 200 meters from there. The only sad thing was, my camera had one more film to go. I decided to click it anyway - a view of Big Ben from National Gallery, with Trafalgar Square included! Now I was like a soldier with no bullets, in front of an army with no guns! I slowly walked towards Big Ben, crossed Thames in front of the Big Ben and turned back in the middle of the middle. I think I have never been lost in my life like this! I had a huge square prism in front of me, with house of Parliaments just besides it. The sky was so beautiful and all made it a beautiful sight to be captured in camera. Walked to the other side and enjoyed the same sitting on a wooden chair on the other side of Thames. I will not forget this evening in my life! Big Ben rang 4:30, 4:45 and 5 too! I was there just amazingly watching at something I have never seen before!
It is dark by five, just went down the steps in front of Big Ben to Westminster tube. Took District line to get down at East Ham and walked back home. Bought three calling cards to India - it is cheaper to call India with the cards than making a local call from a public booth! Funny World!
I will elaborate on each of the places later. The only other amazing fact I left out was, entering a malayalee shop in the middle of Oxford circus selling bags and luggage - A Siddique from Kasaragod to be precise!
Monday, January 12, 2004
LONDON WEEKENDER Introduction
It is drizzling outside, the time is 7:30 am and yet it is dark. A very bad time waking up and getting ready for the office. Have an umbrella, brisk walk to the nearest bus stop and took 101 to East Ham tube station, take district line tube going westwards. They are crowded as our electric trains in Chennai (not as much as Mumbai).The tubes accommodate more than ours as the number of seats are less.
People are the same; I mean what they do, what they talk. They will be reading books or newspapers, or staring at the beautiful girl standing near the door, or gossip about their boss, or simply looking to the top to say I am a gentleman.
Got down at West Ham to shift to the Jubilee lines, up the escalator following directions to the platform for Jubilee lines going westwards. In the escalator, if you want to just stand and let the escalator do its job, stand on the right side giving way to the smarties who are in a hurry. My journey ends in Canary Wharf - you can call it local Wall Street ? Hopefully yes. With big brokers like Morgan Stanley having two huge buildings and a bridge connecting the two, to a small guy with an office next to the hair saloon....
This is a usual morning for me in London. I landed here on Sunday evening and the city accepted me immediately. If you don't know multiplication by 80 you will do great. Still the rent in the central town seems too costly. I stayed in a hotel in Victoria (200 meters from Buckingham Palace) with £40 per day! That too it is not attached! Food is cheap here compared to that, again you will faint of you multiply it by 80.
I will start with another set of weekenders, may be, if I get the luxury of time.
However, for now it is just an Introduction.
People are the same; I mean what they do, what they talk. They will be reading books or newspapers, or staring at the beautiful girl standing near the door, or gossip about their boss, or simply looking to the top to say I am a gentleman.
Got down at West Ham to shift to the Jubilee lines, up the escalator following directions to the platform for Jubilee lines going westwards. In the escalator, if you want to just stand and let the escalator do its job, stand on the right side giving way to the smarties who are in a hurry. My journey ends in Canary Wharf - you can call it local Wall Street ? Hopefully yes. With big brokers like Morgan Stanley having two huge buildings and a bridge connecting the two, to a small guy with an office next to the hair saloon....
This is a usual morning for me in London. I landed here on Sunday evening and the city accepted me immediately. If you don't know multiplication by 80 you will do great. Still the rent in the central town seems too costly. I stayed in a hotel in Victoria (200 meters from Buckingham Palace) with £40 per day! That too it is not attached! Food is cheap here compared to that, again you will faint of you multiply it by 80.
I will start with another set of weekenders, may be, if I get the luxury of time.
However, for now it is just an Introduction.