Category Archives: England

Day 11: Another work day

for me and a low key day for the family. We started out in the gym: me on the treadmill and Gillian in the pool. Then I headed off to the Bank of England where I learned lots more interesting things (to add to the other interesting things I have collected already – I need to better organize stuff!) and the family had a nice big breakfast – unlike the protein bar that I gobbled on my way to the tube. They then got domestic and did a bunch of laundry at the local launderette – it seems that some of the Cannon clan didn’t plan very well in Paris and was left with only one clean T-shirt.

After taking care of the clothing crisis, they headed out to toy heaven known as Hamleys. Frank was actually a bit disappointed: it wasn’t quite as impressive as he remembered. Duncan found things very expensive but that didn’t stop Gillian from buying a T-shirt for her Parisian panda named Pierre. A late snack found them back at the hotel in time to make a cup of tea for me getting home from work.

Next on the agenda: the theatre! Since I had a large lunch – in an executive dining room no less!- and they had a late snack, dinner wasn’t really on the agenda. We stopped by a local pub which was *much* nicer than the one we ventured into last night and had a pint (or two) of real ale (yum!) while we waited for the rain to let up. It let up a enough for us to find another pub with real ales and a better selection of snack type foods so we did grab a bit to eat before heading to the Palace theatre for Spamalot! Two lessons from this theatre experience: first, do your homework and find out what “balcony” really means in the venues you may wind up in! We opted for front balcony tix which turned out to be about 60 feet straight up! Frank was looking for the oxygen masks! Second, just because you buy your tickets at a discount ticket booth, don’t assume that you are actually getting a discount. Not only did we not save any money, we ended up paying a service charge… but at least we got tickets and we did enjoy the show. It’s a late night though and we need to get up early to get pack since we bid farewell to London tomorrow.

/san/

[Pedometer: the family chalked up 19,560 – just less than 10 miles – whereas I only managed about 6,000 but I did manage 4 miles on the treadmill!]

Day 10: A stereotypical English Sunday…

sortof!  We started today with a quick breakfast from a local cafe:  bacon rolls! And then the entire family was shepherded onto the Tube for a trip across town to St. Paul’s Cathedral for the 11:00 service (they still call it mass here!), a sung eucharist with the the St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir and the City of London Sinfonia.  It was absolutely unforgettable: sitting in this amazingly ornate and beautiful cathedral with several hundred other of my closest friends listening to a different version of a service that I pretty much know by heart. A few interesting obeservations:

  1. The mass was led by the “President” – a woman – but the choir was entirely male.
  2. There was no old Testament reading.
  3. Parts of the service that we usually hear spoken – such as the Nicene Creed – were sung by the choir… in Latin!
  4. There were about a thousand people in attendance, approximately 10% of which actually had a clue what was going on.
  5. The acoustics were great for a solo a capella voice but the Sinfonia and the sermon echoed terribly.

The sermon was on the City of London Festival and the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the formal ending of the slave trade.  It was done by one of the 5 priests in attendance with lots of Deacons, vergers and wardsman helping out as well.  Altogether a moving experience that I felt honored to take part in.  (“Best 5 quid we’ve spent yet” was Frank’s review.)  Because it was Sunday, the Cathedral was only open for worship so there was no looking around and taking pictures – which seemed to confuse many people who wandered in wanting to do just that – so I may have to stop by and play tourist tomorrow when I’m done working.

Then what happens after church in all the historical novels and Agatha Christie stories? The family goes home to the Sunday joint that the kitchen staff has been preparing and the quinticenssial Sunday lunch is served.  Well we didn’t have a manor house to return to so we did the next best thing:  went to a restaurant famous for just that!  Simpson’s-in-the-Strand has been serving the best roast beef and lamb for nearly 200 years.  So we took a table in the Grand Divan room and enjoyed our Sunday lunch.  The carver rolls the roast out to the table and cuts slices exactly how you want it.  Frank, Gillian and I had the beef and Duncan had the lamb.  The beef was exquisite!  Gravy, horseradish, Yorkshire pudding, roast potatoes and cabbage goes with it… a bottle of beaujolais (which the French sommolier said I pronounced the name of very well!) and of course desert.  My bread pudding was lovely but Frank won for best desert with the treacle sponge with custard.  Yum!

So after we spend 3 hours eating more food than we normally consume in several days, we decided to take a nice walk to aid in the digestion.  But instead of heading to the local park – which would have been nice because the sun was actually trying to come out – we did what any good American consumer does…. went shopping!  The girls had been very successful on Oxford Street yesterday but now it was the boys’ turn.  We hit the shops looking for goodies for Frank and Duncan and were moderately successful.  (I think they were restraining themselves because they are hitting the world’s best toy store tomorrow!)  We got kicked out of Debenham’s when they shut at 6 and then we wandered back to the hotel to be moan the fact that we still weren’t hungry!

Eventually, we headed out for a pint to the local pub.  This would also be stereotypical English thing to do but for one thing:  today England went smoke free!  As of 6 a.m. this morning, there is no smoking in any enclosed workspaces.  This means bars and restaurants.  We ventured into a pub nearby that had real ales and had a seat.  Apparently, this was truly for locals because we were the youngest (and soberest!) people by far.  So the lure of being able to have a pint without fear of an asthma attack was not enough to keep us in that particular establishment and Gillian professed to actually being hungry so to the chippy we go!  Gillian actually got a chicken nuggets meal while Frank had his own packet of chips with a pickled onion and Duncan and I shared some chips with extra salt and vinegar.  I’m going to ignore the fact that the only vegetable I had all day today was three tablespoons of cabbage and just go to bed fat and happy.  And early – I have to work again tomorrow!

/san/

[Pedometer count: 19,886 or just shy of 10 miles.  Definitely not enough to cover all the food I ate today!]

Day 9: Of car bombs and colorful characters

I see by the comments and emails I’ve gotten that news has crossed the pond.  We are fine.  We find ourselves in the midst of terrorist investigations and just heard about the problems at Glasgow Airport.  None of it directly affects us or our family so please don’t worry but thanks for thinking of us.

Our adventures continue, terrorists or no.  We started a bit late this morning – the gym didn’t open until 8 a.m. and I wanted to start there.  I actually did hit the treadmill for 5K (of course I picked the only machine that did the calculations in Kilometers!) and then ushered the family out the door for the start of the day.  We opted for the lazy but expensive option and had breakfast in the hotel:  a huge buffet with everything from fresh fruit to haggis (really!) so we loaded up and waited for the rain to slow down.  Yes, it is raining – and in England no less, who would have thought!  (There’s actually serious flooding in some parts of the country so we’re still lucky.) We headed to the Victoria and Albert to start the day – one of the few museums I never got a chance to visit while I lived here.  It wasn’t as exciting as we had hoped so we headed across the street to the science museum – now the kids were interested.  Gillian liked all the hands on stuff they had for kids, Duncan and I liked the history of computers and mathmatics and Frank loved the exhibit on the Spitfire.

That took us well past lunch time so we headed to a cafe and had some jacket potatoes and tea before heading to Leicester Square to score some discount tickets for Spamalot!  As we wandered into the square, we couldn’t help but notice the colorfully dressed characters everywhere we turn.  There were lots of rainbow flags and many stages with flamboyant performers and banners that read “London Pride 2007” – yup, we were smack in the middle of the gay pride festivities.  They had a huge stage set up in Trafalgar Square which was mobbed with people making it difficult to get to the National Gallery but we made it for a short tour of the Impressionist rooms which we thoroughly enjoyed.

We then wandered up Charing Cross Road (only stopping in a *few* bookstores!) and started the serious shopping: Oxford Street!  We did some major damage at the sales, especially in the Clark’s store and Marks and Spencer’s.  Mostly Gillian and I benefitted so we need to head back out to get the boys something tomorrow.  I’m sure we’ll figure something out.  Of course, there were lots of our new “friends” parading through the shops and we could hear a parade in Soho with lots of drums and whistles.  Once we were all shopped out and more than a little damp, we headed home for a lovely Indian meal down the street from the hotel.  (Gotta feel bad for Duncan cuz he’s in the other half of the bed with the big gas machine named Frank who had chicken madras and a really large beer tonight.)

Tomorrow, mom is dragging everyone to church… it just so happens to be at St. Paul’s cathedral…..

/san/

[FYI:  17,684 steps or about 8.5 miles not counting my 3.1 miles on the treadmill!]

Day 8: We begin chapter 2 – England!

Today we bid a sad au revior to Paris! We have come to think of the 7th arrondissmente as our French home and were sad to say “Bon jour” to the cute girl at the boulangerie for the last time. We slept in and spent the morning packing and tidying up. One of the down sides to having an apartment is that there is no daily maid service: you make the mess, you clean it up. So that’s what we did. We were surprised to see how much stuff we had accumulated and realized that with seven more weeks to go, the chances of getting our cases zipped on the 19th of August is pretty slim! We’ll have to see about packing up a box or two to send back before heading home.

[Departing thoughts on Paris: I really love this city – far more than I expected to. The French people are not nearly as rude as we had been led to believe; if you make even the smallest effort to speak their language, they are very happy to meet you more than half-way. Frank had a very entertaining conversation with the cab driver today about the psychosis of motorcycle riders in Paris. Not bad for a cabbie with no English and a Scotsman who hasn’t taken French for 20 years! ]

We got a taxi to the train station way earlier than we needed to but it was nice to have plenty of time to wait in line. Even though we bought our train tickets on-line, the self-service machines were not working so we still had to join the lengthy queue to pick up our tickets. Then we waited. Finally, we boarded the 3:19 Eurostar train from Paris Nord to London Waterloo. The train was very comfy and we were able to spread out around our little table with our mini-picnic (all the food that was left in the fridge when we left the apartment: two beers, two yogurts, carrot sticks, pretzels, cherries, grapes and chocolate cookies!) and play cards, Nintendos and do sudoku puzzles.
At 4:54 London time, we arrived and headed for another queue – this time for an English taxi. Come to find out that there are lots of streets near our hotel closed because of a few car bombs and investigations of other terrorist activity (!?!) so during rush hour on a Friday night in London, we took the loooong way round from Waterloo station to Edgware road but made it eventually. For this part of the trip, we caved into good prices on line and booked in at the London Hilton Metropole. I have to say that it was nice to get here and know exactly what we’d be getting! The kids are splashing around in the pool as we speak and I’ll be able to hit the treadmill tomorrow morning! (I didn’t get to do any running in Paris because it was either too cold, too windy, too rainy or all three! I only brought warm weather running gear!)

We did wander around the neighborhood for a while looking for somewhere convenient to have a pint and some fish and chips. We found a place a few blocks down from the hotel but it didn’t take long for us to notice how ethnic the area had become. (Maybe the angry young men at the table behind us arguing in Arabic was a clue….) We did enjoy our supper (Gillian was thrilled to get some steak pie but Duncan didn’t think too much of the English pub version of lasagne) and then explored the area a bit further to find that the area we remembered isn’t gone, it’s just moved off the main road a few blocks.

So we’ll do some strategizing to see how to spend our two days as a family before Frank and the kids invade Hamley’s on Monday while I’m at the Bank of England. Already on the list: the Victoria and Albert, a return to the British Museum, some theatre (possibly Lion King) and on Sunday Orchestral Mass with the City of London Sinfonia at St. Paul’s Cathedral, a proper Sunday roast (maybe Simpsons on the Strand?) and shopping on Oxford Street. We’re toying with the idea of trying to stop by Wimbeldon tomorrow but we’ll have to see how the weather holds out.

/san/

[FYI: only 12,337 steps today (about 6 miles) since we spent so much time sitting in stations, trains and taxis.]