Camden Calling

As I had a busy day ahead of me, I was up, showered and ready for breakfast by 9am. I managed to coax Dan out of bed to join me with the promise that he could return to snoozing once we had eaten. The rooms may have been tired but they did a good full English breakfast buffet to make up for it. Coffee and tea served to the table. Heartily enjoyed, with a slice of marmalade toast the perfect English way although by now I was wishing I had procured that small jar of vegemite in Berlin’s backpacker central. I left Dan grazing over his breakfast and headed into London’s tacky tourist central – around Leicester Square – in search of a cheap carry on case so I could put all my new shoes in it, strap my small backpack to my big one and stay under the weight limit. Once I found a souvenir shop that was open (this part of London tends to swing into action around 11am or so) it was easy. I sensibly purchased a purple spotted case so if I do ever need to check it and pick it up on the conveyer belt in Canberra, it will be easy to spot next to all the non-descript black ones.

New bag in hand it was back to the hotel to pack and check out. A bit of a monumental task since I had just been shoving stuff into the pockets in all my bags for some time now. After the packing and the repacking and the checking the room to make sure nothing was left behind (apart from most of the toiletries I was dumping to save on weight. Let’s face it in the humidity of Singapore, who is going to notice if IU am using the cheap stuff the hotel provides? Packed and checked out, I left Dan in South Kensington with a few tips about the museums and headed off to Camden. Now that I had space and weight allowance for more shoes, I was going to use it, damn it.

Knowing that we would catch the tube to Heathrow later in the afternoon, I bought a day pass that covered Zone 4. Camden was already in zone 2 so I figured it would be cheaper. And I wouldn’t have to wrestle with the queues with all my luggage. I headed back to Irregular Choice in Camden High Street. It’s not often you find an array of original shoe designs even if a few were a bit Lady Gagaish for me to get away with these days. Despite its Camden address, these weren’t bargain shoes by any stretch of the imagination -starting at about £80. I could have spent my life savings in there but remembered I still had to carry my bag (and feed myself once I got home). I found a glorious pair of lace up houdstooth booties that will make a nice addition to my winter wardrobe. And I picked the shoes on sale – Dan will be proud. Beautiful shoe box in hand (that was of course going to get ditched when I repacked in the hotel lobby, I headed back to meet Dan. (The Separation of Church and Skate – NOFX – From the excellent album – The war on Errorism, released during the Bush presidency in the US. Most people associate NOFX with a samey-samey punk rock sound that fires up pre-emo kids into circle pit frenzy but the genius behind Fat Wreck Chords and his mates also produce some biting political and social commentary. If you don’t own this record – get it.)

With only an hour or so left before we had to head to Heathrow, we wandered up the road, past all the houses we could never afford, weaving through the traffic we could never afford, into the Department store we could never afford. The thing that’s impressive about Harrods though is the food hall. Just rooms and rooms of meat, produce, deli and specialty items (like tea and chocolates. There were a million and one readymade meals or counters you could eat at. While high end pre-prepared meals have become more prevalent in Australia over the past decade or so, Harrods was a step above (and probably more expensive than a café meal at home. As we wandered through the seemingly endless halls, we eventually arrived at the jewelry part of the store. I asked Dan if he was worried we had ended up here. His response? He felt quite comfortable because there was no way he could afford anything they had to sell.

We collected our luggage and headed to the tube – fortunately we were on the right line for Heathrow. Initially dealing with our luggage in the crowded carriage was a struggle and we had to stand up for the entire 35 minute journey. It was much cheaper and faster than most of the other options. My last couple of experiences through Heathrow were quite difficult with lengthy waiting times and complex visa and passport checks. This experience was much simpler, perhaps because the first leg of our journey was within the European Union and we flew out of Terminal 2. When we arrived there was no queue at the Finnair checkin counter. We had all our bags checked in, with boarding passes in hand in just a few minutes. From here through Immigration and Customs, a simple passport check and luggage scan. There was a full body scanner but they were only making some people go through it. The whole process was really quick and left us with a couple of hours to wait before our short flight to Helsinki.

We wandered about to see what was in the terminal – answer – not much. And found a seat. We hadn’t really eaten since breakfast but Dan was keen to avoid the expensive cafes and restaurants in the airport. We chose a last visit to Pret-a-Manger. Dan had the same sandwich again. I chose a rye sandwich and some soup. We also both sampled their quite good brownies. I then used up the rest of my British change in the souvenir shop – including the purchase of a beanbag neck pillow for the flight – albeit with a union jack on it. On the short hop to Helsinki I did something I had never done before. In those few minutes before you take off I always flick through the in-flight magazine and onboard shopping catalogues. Usually I just put them down but this time I spied an ingenious device that solved one of my perennial travelling issues – carrying perfume. This was a lipstick sized atomizer that you could sit on top of any perfume bottle to fill. So I bought it. And in an interesting twist it had been awarded by the red dot design museum I had visited in Essen.

There was snow on the ground when we landed. Fortunately though, we got off the plane through the terminal and arrived in the transit lounge without having to re-clear security. About 30 minutes later we were on the plane to Singapore. No rescreening – just a ticket and cursory passport check at the counter. (Dr Who – Cybermen remix – Pound System – I was a slow comer to the world of electronic music and to this day I am still pretty discerning. Pound System were one of my fave Australian acts from an era dominated by electronic love ins and big fluffy creatures. The music from this album feels pretty dated now but you have to give points to anything that samples the Dr Who theme.)

The 12 hour flight to Singapore was long (and tedious). And the meal schedule and darkness did nothing to help with jetlag adjustment. It was almost midnight when we took off. They fed us almost immediately and then insisted on the cabin remaining dark until we were about an hour out of Singapore, where it was 4pm in the afternoon. Firstly, not many adults sleep for 10 hours. I can’t sleep on a plane anyway and the Finnair TV show selection isn’t outstanding. I like to look out the window and the hostesses always get annoyed even if you raise the shield just a crack, so it couldn’t possibly bother anyone else. We flew over Afghanistan and the Himalayas – it was daytime. All I wanted to do was look out the window. Let’s not mention the couple in front of us who lowered their seat backs as soon as the plane took off so it was nearly impossible to watch anything, and who refused to lift them up even during the meal service because they weren’t hungry.

Christmas themed activities – 24 War museums and model shops – 3 Design experiences – 2.5

 

 

Where a man’s a man and the children dance to the Pipes of Pan

We rose at 6am to start our odyssey into the English countryside, something neither of us had done before. First we headed for Paddington Station to catch the train to Oxford. We departed quite early to avoid the rush on the tube and because we thought we might have to queue to get tickets at Paddington. No queues. In fact no ticket windows. There was actually nothing at Paddington except ticket machines and the platforms. There wasn’t even any staff to confirm we were on the right platform. And the tickets were really expensive – no wonder a Britrail pass costs so much. The two one way tickets to Oxford, about a two hour train journey, cost me close to $100. If we’d run down a steep flight of stairs with our packs on (remembering mine was probably close to 20kg by now, we may have made the earlier train. We didn’t and as a result sat on a not moving train. Eventually we were off through the flooded countryside and it was still raining. We arrived in Oxford a couple of hours later, in the pouring rain. The Hertz hire car place was supposed to be at the station. After some not very helpful conversations with station staff and locals, we decided to turn on the roaming data and see if we could locate it. It turns out it was about 3km away in a light industrial area. Not too far to walk with our packs if it wasn’t raining (and if one of them wasn’t 20+kilos). We made the decision to catch a cab which was the right one on two levels a) the rental company reimbursed us for the taxi fare and b) we got to ride in a London cab for the first time. They weren’t plush as I had imagined. They in fact looked like they could be hosed out. They had a seat across the back and then a metal floor with flip down seats facing backwards. What this meant was that you could actually put your luggage in your cab with you.

A short cab ride later and we were at the rental place going through the longest vehicle hire process I’ve ever seen. I swear it took us an hour to get out of there and by this time we were really hungry for breakfast so we headed back into Oxford and managed to drive through a bus only lane in the first five minutes. On the plus side, given Dan still had his international licence, it was possible for him to be insured to drive the car. Unbelievably, despite ordering one and being from Australia, the guy at the hire car company couldn’t understand why we needed a GPS. He thought we were picking up the car and spending two days driving to the ferry terminal at Holyhead. Even so, we’re from Australia – how would we know where the ferry terminal was without some kind of map? We wandered for a while and ended up going back to the first bakery we saw – Dan had a sausage roll and I had a Cornish pastie – grabbed a coffee, coke and water and headed out of town. First stop – Stonehenge.

The car we hired was a 2011 Ford Focus and it was a really great drive. It handled the highways (and the few hills we went up) with ease. We programmed Stonehenge into the GPS and off we went hurtling south along the highway until we reached the roundabout that was just a few miles south of Stonehenge. The popularity of the mythical monument made this junction a roadblock. Presumably the heritage value of the rock circle itself meant that only a single lane highway in each direction was acceptable. Eventually we came upon the entrance suggested by the outdated maps on our GPS but it was closed. That entry took you right up to the stone circle so the walk was only about 50-100 metres or so. In order to protect the surrounds from the marauding invasion of tourists, the British National Trust people had moved the entrance about 5kms down the road, built a large education centre and whacked a $40 charge on entry – which if you had come this far, you were definitely going to pay. There were landrovers and carts to get you to the monument but the line for them was so long we decided it would be quicker to walk. That also gave us the opportunity to take in the typography that surrounds Stonehenge with centuries of different civilization, even before the stones appeared.

There are plenty of theories about how the stone circle at Stonehenge was built from early Myan migration to aliens but one thing is for sure – the vastness of the landscape, the tight circle of the stones and the sun twinkling through was eerie if not spiritual. You really felt a sense of something – if only the reverence to Mother Earth. Our delay in getting here and the time it took to walk up the hill meant that the sun was starting to dive in the sky which gave it extra gravitas. As a normal visitor, you haven’t been able to walk inside the circle of stones nor go anywhere near them for decades. You actually can’t walk all the way around either – probably because there would be no way to capture the stones without the marauding hoards. It is not easy amongst the plethora of selfies and photobombing to stop and reflect on this magnificent place but if you do go I implore you to do so. Just put the camera down, even for a second and experience the sense of place without the aid of technology. You will be the better for it.

Eventually we decided it was time to hit the road but not before a visit to the extensive gift shop, where I found quite the appropriate tacky memorabilia – Stonehenge in a can. You can’t beat that. Unlike Turkey or Germany, the word tourist added a sizeable cost to the souvenirs and the café. We couldn’t help but purchase the former but eschewed the latter for some good old fashioned British crisps from the service station up the road. Then we headed to Glastonbury. (Everybody wants to rule the world – Tears for Fears – on of my first forays into how music can embody hopelessness. Long before I ever discovered the glory of Gothic Tears for Fears, whose musical sensibilities belied their depressing lyrical compositions, were the band for my darker moments.)

Unfortunately I chose the most direct rather than quickest route. The GPs took us down all sorts of country roads – the type you see in British romantic comedies where drivers have a hard time even squeezing the quintessential British car – and old skool mini – through the space between two bluestone walls (Four weddings and a funeral comes to mind) It was starting to get dark and I’ve got to say Dan did a spectacular job in a car he didn’t really know squeezing through the bridges, driving up and down dales and negotiating the tightest corners I have ever seen through villages and countryside alike. Some of the buildings and the bluestone walls, although much, much older reminded me of Kiama in NSW Australia.

After some intense driving we arrived at Glastonbury with the intent of visiting the castle there. Glastonbury Tor. My original understanding was it was high on the hillside just outside of the town. However, it was now quite dark and we, Dan in particular, were tired after our driving ordeal. The centre of town was littered with alternative stores selling hippy trinkets – like time had stood still here since the mid 90s. Or maybe it’s just that the return of the 90s has come with a bigger force than I realised. At any rate, most of the stores looked like they were closed but we weren’t really hungry enough to stop for dinner. We vowed to come back for a driving holiday around the UK and Ireland and put Glastonbury on the itinerary. From here we continued on to our next stop – Bristol, although not our final destination for the night. (Handwasher – You Am I – one of their ballads from the purple sneakers era – reminds me of heady sweaty nights at the ANU bar, largely during winter)

Like everyone else who goes to Bristol – our main focus was Banksy-spotting. I had a list of the locations of at least 4 or 5 Banksy pieces, including the infamous window and sniper. Unfortunately I hadn’t programmed them into the GPS yet so we just headed for the central business district and parked in a decrepit looking carpark. The mall next to the carpark appeared to be closed down so we went out onto the street and stood near any shop that had wi-fi in an attempt to see how far away some of the street art was. It turns out at least four kilometres. We got back in the car, programmed in the first one and drove there – we couldn’t see anything but parked the car in the nearest carpark and went for a walk. Bristol is an incredibly hilly seaside town. You get the sense that the depressed economy has had a marked effect here ion more than one occasion but that there’s a sense of resilience here. It reminded me a bit of Newcastle in Australia but with crappier ocean frontage and cooler buildings. As we wandered around I mused that Bristol should also be added to the returns list.

Bristol contains heaps of examples of Banksy’s work but they are spread out across the city so in any short stroll it’s not like you are going to find an extensive catalogue. But Banksy isn’t the only street artist here. Everywhere you look, you find an impressive array of street art, and largely, unlike the East Side Gallery in Berlin, the artists are respectful and the taggers kept in check. After 10 minutes of walking we came to the spot I had listed for the window piece and there it was in all its glory. Now I am often one to shy away from lengthy waits to see famous paintings in galleries but this is different. A canvas painted by an artist is then bought – the artist wouldn’t usually have any input into where or if it’s hung or even if it is lumbered by an overpowering gilded frame. In contrast the sense of place (if not time) is intrinsic to the work of a street artist. It doesn’t matter if I see a Monet hanging in the Louvre, on a tour of Australia, in someone’s lounge room or arguably in a book. Seeing a photo of Banksy’s window in a magazine, however, gives no sense of place, of where it was painted and how or of the culture that produced such a rich tapestry of street art. While we were standing there admiring it, a couple of other Australian tourists came by and asked if it was a Banksy – one of them musing that all they had done all day was wander around finding Banksys at every turn. From here we wandered back to where the sniper was supposed to be but despite all efforts, we could not find it. It turns out it had been replaced by an image of the Queen around the time of the Jubilee, after the original artwork was vandalized and tagged.

We headed back along the road trying to find a pub that served counter meals – eventually we came across one – I tucked into cod and chips (which was supposed to come with tartare but didn’t and Dan had a snitty and chips. Washed down with a beer, they were just what the doctor ordered and at more realistic prices than the designer pubs in London. It was about then that I realised we were supposed to arrive at our guesthouse accommodation in Bath before 8pm and it was now 7:30pm. Fortunately the GPS told us we were about 25 minutes away

After negotiating the streets of this medieval town, we came upon Oldfields House, the spectacular guest house we had booked to stay in. The two story stone manor surrounded by a stone wall and lush gardens that would probably have been more fun if it wasn’t raining, was just as lush inside. Our hostess for the evening was just on her way out for the evening when we arrived. She showed us to our grand room and we retired for the evening. A huge King Bed and antique furnishings, this was probably the plushest room we had visited yet. And the bathroom (obviously an add in to the original room, didn’t detract from the scale. We curled up for a good night’s rest.

Christmas themed activities – 24 War museums and model shops – 3 Design experiences – 2.5 (because the search for Banksy is probably worth a half)

 

 

London’s Brilliant Parade

We awoke to another clear blue sunny day in London town. It was Sunday so that meant two things – more markets and Sunday brunch. We wandered out of the hotel with a rough plan that included a visit to Camden Town and a visit to Big Ben. Of course the plan immediately went off the rails when I took us off the main road to find the Petticoat Lane Market. Sounds interesting but really wasn’t lots of stalls selling poorly made rip offs in size 8-10 and guys selling fake designer handbags on sheets. The only problem was that you couldn’t seem to get out of it – through a maze of laneways, we eventually emerged a few blocks away from the train station. By now we were feeling hungry and the pub on the corner up ahead was about to open and serve an English breakfast. So like every other tourist in the vicinity we waited and then wandered in. We ordered at the bar but almost three quarters of an hour passed by, my tea and Dan’s coke long gone and we still hadn’t seen a sighting of our brekky. Not that they admitted it but I am pretty sure they forgot all about us. Another (shorter) wait and eventually it arrived – bacon, sausage, mushroom, tomato, beans, eggs and toast – a proper English breakfast. Tasty but not worth an hour’s wait.

From here we made our way to Camden town by tube. Camden Town station has got to be one of the busiest small stations in London. There are at least five station staffers just telling people not to stop in the station and assisting them to go through the turnstiles more quickly. People with prams, the elderly, the disabled and those with toddlers are directed to other nearby tube stations as the platform is a very long way down and there are only cramped stairs to get there. When you emerge from the station in the middle of an extraordinarily busy market, surrounded by markets selling everything from Goth outfits to tea towels with a London underground Map and when you turn to look away from the High Street you are faced with one of the more iconic of London’s pubs – The world’s End. I was eager to seek out gems I could take home and wear (like my space age Dr Martens ankle boots and not the purple goth skirt I purchased on my last visit that still hasn’t been turned into a party dress yet). But our first order of business was to find a model shop Dan had discovered on line.

It was the first model shop Dan had attempted to find since Stockholm. He had already missed out on the Porsche museum (which I was also looking forward to) and had chosen to spend today looking around London rather than go to Cambridge to look at the British Aerospace Museum. The only problem was when we arrived at the site of the store all we found was a notice letting us know it had closed down and that the nearest shop was a gazillion miles away. (Jump – Aztec Camera – a fabulous lounge cover of the mid 80s David Lee Roth monster. I love a good, well arranged cover and this one definitely fits the bill.)

As we wandered down the road, I spied a goth shop and of course just had to go in. And of course I found something I wanted to bring home – a winter coat – not the most practical addition to my now very heavy pack so I left it and decided to have a good think about it first. We wandered further down the road, weaving in and out of the hordes that seem to fill this road, day in day out no matter what day of the week. Eventually we arrived at Camden lock and its labyrinth of handcrafted goods and infamous multicultural food markets. There were plenty of things we might have tried if our big English breakfast wasn’t still being digested. Even Dan, who usually can’t resist trying market food, couldn’t fit anything in. As we rounded the corner, we found a stall of interesting T-shirts and found an even cooler Star Wars one than the one I had lost in Germany – it had a Star Wars walker being constructed out of tetris pieces. I bought it as a late Christmas present for Dan.

When we rounded the corner I spied the coolest shoe shop I had ever seen. Granted some of the creations were more Lady Gaga than Wall Street but I love a good original shoe. I spied several pairs that I could blow all my remaining holiday on but I had already decided to get the coat – there was only one left in my size – and sensibly decided that if I still wanted the shoes, I could do a mad dash to grab them on our return to London when I only had to carry my pack to the airport. My coat was our last stop in Camden but that of course meant I had to carry it around for the rest of the day – it had got too warm for a winter coat.

We headed back to the Thames to continue our sightseeing adventure. We walked along the foreshore to London Bridge and the houses of parliament. On my last trip here I had walked along the southern shore past the London Eye to get here. It turns out there was a Second World War Memorial of sorts that I missed last time. Lots of shots of Big Ben and Westminster Abbey later, including recreating my Big Ben London Eye selfie, we wandered into the park in the square these buildings faced. There are quite a few statues of famous leaders in the square which I hadn’t previously paid much attention to. The statues included Nelson Mandela, which was covered in flowers, becoming a makeshift shrine to probably one of the most important leaders of the last half century. Just like the fall of the Berlin Wall, the release of Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid in South Africa is one of the biggest political events that occurred in my lifetime. When I was a teenager there was a constant protest outside the South African High Commission in my home town, a hugely controversial rogue cricket tour and a world wide movement to free Mandela from the prison where he had spent the majority of his adult life. It makes me feel old to think these events happened while I was a teenager but at the same time it reminds me there are some things that have happened in the last three decades to improve equality in the world. (Cherub Rock – The Smashing Pumpkins – one of my two fave Pumpkins tracks, the layers of sound in this track make me think of being rugged up on a cold winter’s night. Some tracks are summer songs and some winter – this is definitely, and appropriately, the latter.)

From musing over the enigmatic leader who lead revolutionary change in South Africa, we headed to the home of our own head of state, Buckingham Palace which reminded me of two things – 1) how we don’t have much to crow about seeing as equality for our own Indigenous peoples was only made law about 30 years before south Africa and that we as yet haven’t had an Indigenous Prime Minister 2) How even without a massive revolution, we are too gutless to change our own system of Government to reflect the independence of our nation. Having said all that, Buckingham Palace is worth a visit, if only to see the Beefeaters and Hyde Park.

As we left the Houses of Parliament, we pied a man and his son having their photo taken in what is probably one of only a few remaining red phone boxes in London. It is peculiar to think of such a mundane object as a phone box being the subject of a photo like this no matter how iconic the phone boxes are. Telstra phone boxes are also pretty rare these days. The one up the road from my old house where I phoned boyfriends from is long gone. Maybe a photo project is needed. We wandered just up the road until we spied the edge of St James Park., which to Dan’s great delight was filled with birds. Fortunately they were the type that didn’t put me in a fluster – geese, swans and ducks.

We wandered through the park, greeting our new winged friends until we arrived at Buckingham Palace. There was no changing of the guard, which I had just missed last time. While there were still plenty of visitors, this time I could actually get a look past the steel and gold laced gates into the palace forecourt, which allowed me a glimpse of the front door and the beefeater guarding it. The guard was quite a bit more portly than I was expecting – the kind you see in a comedy rather than a James Bond flick. And he was wearing a long grey coat instead of the traditional red coat. We wandered back along The Mall and then decided to head for Soho and Covent Garden, only a short stroll away through London’s real Monopoly Board past places such as Pall Mall, Regent Street and Piccadilly Circus. The first part of the journey took us past a series of very classy looking restaurants making us just a little bit hungry. Further on we passed the massive M&Ms shop which just made us even hungrier. There was even a Christmas Market (more of a fun fair) but we were a bit over Christmas Markets (unsurprising as it was now almost a week after Christmas. (Barflies at the Beach – Royal Crown Revue – one of a number of new style swing bands from the mid to late 90s. Even my fave cartoon, Daria had a swing themed episode.)

Wandering past the ticket booths in Soho and Covent Garden, I floated the idea of a show – the Book of Mormon and Spamalot were still running – but we were both pretty tired and Dan isn’t really that fond of shows. I suggested Pret a Manger as a good spot for a late lunch. And I inadvertently unleashed a new obsession. I’ve got to admit, I, like everyone else who has done London on the cheap, am a huge fan of Pret. Dan discovered their Salami and cheese baguette while I had a ham, pickle and cheese melt.

It was starting to get dark but we decided to take a walk around Soho through Chinatown (which, quite surprisingly, is much smaller than Sydney’s Chinatown). My trusty Lonely Planet Encounter guide (the new ones are called pocket guides) listed a store called Vintage Mag which sold, well, vintage magazines. It sounded right up our alley so we made a beeline for it. It was a treasure trove. Two floors of magazines from the last 80 years or so from Fashion mags to street press and every conceivable niche in between. There were also vintage movie posters, T-shirts, magnets of show posters and signs and all manner of other goodies. They were cleverly marketed too. In the basement they had boxes of magazines that corresponded to years of birth for important milestones. We spent the best part of an hour wandering around the shop looking at all the fab things we could buy. My Berlin poster had already taken a hammering so I thought better of buying a movie poster, despite finding plenty of contenders. I settled on a T-shirt featuring a 50s drag racing poster and a magnet of a kinks show poster. I thought about purchasing magazines but I already have a bigger collection of those than I really need. Yes it’s true – between Dan and I, we are only a few steps away from being hoarders.) After our immersion into the world of collectible magazines, we were pretty tired so we headed back to the hotel to chill out, watching a marathon of specials about the making of Dr Who.

Earlier in the day, I had suggested going to a local pub for Sunday Roast, as it was indeed Sunday. It’s one if the things I really enjoyed last time I came here – the relaxed Sunday Roast in the pub and I don’t know why you don’t see it more here during winter. Unfortunately, on this occasion it wasn’t the wisest choice. Our hope was that the pub almost next to the hotel, of which I had read a number of stellar reviews, would be open for dinner. It wasn’t. We vowed not to go back to the place where we had breakfast that forgot us so we found another pub along the way. It started off badly – when we went to the bar to order, despite the fact we could see plenty of other people eating meals in the pub, they told us we’d have to go to the dining room upstairs, which we did. We ordered and then a couple of beers later we still hadn’t gotten our meals. We even asked about it and still nothing. Almost an hour after we ordered, with me falling asleep on the table, someone finally came and admitted they had forgotten us. It was then that I realised this pub was run by the same company that owned the one that forgot us at breakfast. There really is something to be said for owner operated businesses, even franchises in the hospitality industry. Eventually our meals arrived and while the Yorkshire pudding was fabulous, the rest of the meal wasn’t worth an hour’s wait. While I had originally intended a bit of a wander after dinner or to chill in the pub, I was so hungry by the time dinner arrived that it had taken every last bit of energy so we just headed home to bed and an early start to pick up our hire car. (Slow Dog – Belly – this song like much of Belly’s catalogue reminds me of the Ainslie share house I was living in when they appeared on the scene. It had been a long time since I had listened to new music on the radio and it was this (not Nirvana) that kicked me into the 90s).

Christmas themed activities – 24 War museums and model shops – 3 Design experiences – 2

 

The Liberty of Norton Folgate

 

 

After mastering the tube to get ourselves to the Tune hotel in Spitafields we paid 10 pounds to check into our hotel three hours early as storing our bags would have cost the same. As we walked from the tube station to the hotel, which was on Norton Folgate Street, we passed the local café, called The Liberty of Norton Folgate, just like the concept album Madness released a few years ago. It was like an omen – one of the things I have been looking forward to on this trip is seeing Madness on New Year’s Eve in Dublin. Tune hotels is one of the new breed of cheaper hotels in the UK- it’s a bit like formula 1 hotels with a bathroom pod in the room. The beds and bedding are better quality but the room is smaller and you pay for all the incidentals like TV, wireless and even towels. But as we booked through Expedia, all these things were part of the normal charge for our room. I was very grateful the towels (which by the way were the big, fluffy variety) were part of the deal. The most interesting thing in the room was the fold out table, about big enough for a 10 inch ipad and a mobile phone, which was designed to be a charging station. The reason it folderd out? Because you couldn’t walk past the end of the bed if it didn’t.

After relieving ourselves of our backpacks, we decided to head out to see some of London. I was keen to see some of the things I hadn’t quite gotten to last time and suggested the Tower Bridge as our first stop. I had ventured to Spitafields on my last visit – essentially to visit the markets and vintage stores – but hadn’t realised how close it actually was to the business district. We strolled through the markets as we headed towards the Thames. There was still quite a range of designers selling their wares but there were quite a few stalls selling more common market wares. As we turned the corner about half a kilometre from the markets, right there in front of us was the Gherkin – probably London’s most iconic new building. In a world where skyscrapers are mostly a variation on the rectangular prism theme, the gherkin, which if one were to attach a moniker to it, would have been more appropriately called the cigar, stands out. And it stand out even more when you see it up close after emerging from an area rife with 19 century row houses, warehouses and cobblestoned lanes. The sun was quite bright – yes I know it is London – but there were bright blue skies and we hadn’t really seen the sun since Stuttgart and it was the first time in weeks that the sun had set after 3pm (Cathartik – The Tea Party one of the lesser known tracks from their first electronic fusion album, Transmission. The Tea Party came on my radar in 1997. Heavy and dark but with an incredibly astute musical quality, they remind me that being fully consumed by music in the middle of a live show is one of the best feelings in the world.)

For those like me who pay little attention to these things, you might be surprised to know that the tower of London isn’t really a tower the way one would envisage a tower. In my mind it was always a very tall structure where those held captive in the tower (say like Rapunzel in the fairytales) were held on the top floor with no way out. Of course in the case of the tower of London the tower would be more like a dungeon with racks and whips and other sorts of torture devices. The Tower of London is in fact more of a fort or a castle with lots of building including some wooden buildings, surrounded by castle walls. The original Roman city wall ran close by here – you can walk along its path although most of the city wall has either disappeared or been subsumed into other buildings over the centuries. There is one part that is preserved on a level of an underground car park. Unlike the wall, the tower still stands and is a tourist hotspot. Like many of the places we had already been, the lines to get in were extraordinary and the cost to enter quite high so we decided to take a look from the outside and keep on walking, across the Tower bridge.

The Tower Bridge, like Big Ben and red double decker buses, is part of the quintessential British iconography and if I’m honest, the imagery that springs to mind when I think of the tower. The bridge itself is quite brightly painted blue and white, which is something I hadn’t realised. Apparently it was painted red, white and blue for the Queen’s silver jubilee in 1977. The shoreline from the bridge is quite interesting. The gherkin and a number of other modern buildings in London’s financial district provide a thoroughly modern backdrop for the Tower on one side and on the other stands a row of very new and striking buildings, fronted by a naval ship. After we crossed the bridge, we walked along the foreshore. Unsurprisingly Dan was interested in looking at and taking photos of the ship. Grey and white clouds had now started to come over – there was no rain but it made a perfect backdrop for the Tower Bridge.

A little further along the foreshore we arrived at the borough Market – central London’s fresh food market. Given what we had seen in the rest of Europe, the Borough markets were far less exotic, offering much of the fare we would find in the local farmers market here (without such a heavy Asian influence. That is until you ventured out of the main covered market area and discovered the cheese shop – Neal’s Yard Dairy. It was a sight to behold. Hundreds of different kinds of cheeses filled the window – beautifully colourful Cheshire and Glouctershire cheeses, delectable washed rind cheeses and the most beautiful collection of stilton’s I had ever seen. The shop itself was also impressive, decked out almost entirely in luxurious warm woods. No prepackaged cheese board selections here – just like the Christmas markets, the cheese was cut fresh to your specification and wrapped in paper for the journey home. A sliver of some of these cheeses would cause me to take out a second mortgage but that wasn’t a deterrent, the shop was one of the busiest in a market teaming with people. We took one last look, breathed in the heady smell of the cheese smorgasbord and moved on. (London Song – The Breeders – everyone else will tell you that Frank Black is the best thing that came out of The Pixies. For me that answer is definitely The Breeders.)

We continued on, scanning for an appropriate (not too expensive) mid afternoon lunch venue – a bit of a tall ask in this part of London. We wandered along the foreshore until we reached the Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre – another recreation of something from the past but unlike the stupid castle, this one was reconstructed for a reason – so Shakespeare’s p[lays could be experienced in the kind of venue intended when they were written over three centuries ago. From here it was to the Tate Modern but not for a visit this time, despite the fact that it is definitely worth your time – the Roy Lichtensteins are worth a wander alone. For today’s adventure though, the gallery just happened to be located at the point the Millennium Bridge crosses back over the Thames. When I spoke to the German lady in Rothenberg who had visited Canberra, she commented that there were only two bridges over Canberra’s waterway, Lake Burley Griffin. There are in fact a couple of others at the dam wall and at the other end of the lake where the Monaro River starts to broaden out but I get her point. Wandering around the waterways of the great cities of Europe, there are bridges as far as the eye can see. And in some places you could launch a paper airplane between them.

We walked across the twisted steel bridge toward St Paul’s cathedral. London’s other famous church. Bridges, like skyscrapers are best viewed from the ground or other bridges or skyscrapers, where their true beauty and magnificence can be seen. The Millennium Bridge is a bit of an exception – while it is impressive from a distance, you get a real feel for what the designer intended as you cross under the twisted, yet smooth and shiny steel structure. It is also perfectly placed to capture a good view of St Paul’s framed by the other buildings on the foreshore. As we wandered through the grounds, it felt quite serene in the twilight. It was late afternoon and the sun had set. We dropped into a Starbucks to warm up with a hot chocolate and take advantage of the free wi-fi. Like a visit to McDonald’s but with something you actually want to consume. After a sugar overload and some facebook time, we found the nearest tube station and headed back to the hotel. We decided to chill out for a while in the room and got sucked into television. It was only the second time we had turned one on during the whole trip – a feat for a TV addict such as me. Eventually we came out of our Dr Who induced time wasting and headed down the road to London’s infamous (and tourist ridden) mecca of Indian restaurants – Brick Lane.

The first thing you notice when you enter Brick Lane is the touts – every restaurant, and the cobblestone laneway is lined with them for kilometres – has a guy out the front extolling the virtues of their establishment’s menu. We surely looked like tourists because it doesn’t matter how many places I go with touts or pushy sales people, I still always feel like a deer in the headlights wishing it could run without getting caught. And that’s the exact same reaction I have in a shop at home when someone comes up to ask whether they can help me. On this point Dan and I agree. If we want help or want to know what is on your menu that is so great, we’ll ask. Consequently we chose the one restaurant on the street that didn’t have a tout as a doorway ornament.

It was a good choice too. As soon as we sat down, they brought us pappadams. In most Australian restaurants, they arrive with a bowl of raita. Here though the accompaniments were much more lavish – raita of course and a number of other delectable dips – including a sweet mango chutney and a spicy vegetable pickle. Our tastebuds excited, we went a bit overboard with the menu, ordering an entrée platter of samosas, onion bhaji, seekh kebab and tandoori chicken, butter chicken, a spinach and cottage cheese curry, butter chicken, steamed rice and naan. It was fabulous although both the spinach curry and butter chicken were a lot sweeter than we are used to. While butter chicken has a slightly sweet flavour in Australia it is much richer with a fuller tomato flavour. We washed it down with some beers (and a mango lassi) and of course couldn’t finish it. (Sooner or later – The Slackers – old skool ska at its finest – they capture an era and sense of place that belies the fact they formed in 1991 in NYC.)

Our bellies full, we took a stroll along the cobblestoned laneway, contented that we could truthfully tell the touts we had already eaten. Dan came across a Bangladeshi restaurant and scanned their menu for the Bangladeshi chicken he had enjoyed at our local Multicultural Festival almost a year ago. But of course the restaurant menu had 15 different chicken dishes and none of them were actually called Bangladeshi chicken. Dan also mused about purchasing some Indian sweets from one of the multitude of Indian bakeries sandwiched between the restaurants, touts and the mini cab phones on every corner. One of the reasons for Brick Lane’s infamy is the quintessential English experience of an after pub/ nightclub curry – a bit like kebabs but they certainly have them too. We thought better of that plan after realizing just how full we were and decided to head back to the hotel and crash out.

Christmas themed activities – 24 War museums and model shops – 3 Design experiences – 2

Goodbye to old England (hopefully not forever)

After checking out I had just four or five hours before I had to head to the airport so I decided to try and cram in as much as I could. My first stop was Shepherd’s Bush. Why? To set eyes on the infamous Shepherd’s Bush Empire where many of my favourite bands have played. And what did I find right next door? An Australian-themed bar. It’s not hard to tell you are in Aussie territory in London.

 

And it isn’t difficult to see why so many Australians live in London. London is easy. There are loads of other Australians and the English really aren’t that different to us. Sure there are more things happening in London than Canberra and probably Sydney or Melbourne but largely the society functions the same way ours does. The supermarkets carry the same products (except they don’t have vegemite or Tim Tams and the vegetables are all crap). The tube makes London incredibly easy to negotiate – there is really no need for a car if you stay in the city (and then you don’t have to pay the congestion tax). They even have a similar sense of humour (we love their comedy, they love our soaps). Sure the money takes a while to work out and the exchange rate is awful but if you’re living there and getting paid in pounds, it’s going to be worth a lot more in Australia. And it’s safe. Simply put, of all the places I visited, London, despite its size, was the easiest.

 

Next stop was another AbFab spot – Holland Park. With tree-lined avenues of immaculate terraces, this was the perfect place to choose as Eddie’s home. An opulent suburb where only the best will do. I headed back towards Oxford Street for a final walk around and up a side street, in a dodgy little off-licence, I struck gold. I had searched high and low for a London punk postcard. I had received quite a lot of these from friends who did the London thing in the late 80s and early 90s. In fact I still have one particularly amusing one that was sent to my brother and I, featuring London punks with haircuts very similar to the ones we were sporting at the time. The sender had been away for some time and had no way of knowing this. It was a complete fluke. The closest thing I had found in the previous five days was a bumming around in London postcard with naked bottoms. But there it was, staring back at me on the creaky postcard stand that looked like it hadn’t been touched in months – a London punk postcard. Needless to say, I bought several. [‘Gyroscope’ – The Tea Party – this is my favourite Tea Party album where they began to mix some electronic music into their repertoire of Morrison style vocals and eclectic string instruments]

 

After that I headed back to my fave spot – Camden Town – for a last shot at shopping. Despite the fact that I had said I wasn’t going to buy anything else, I decided to go back and have another look in the Doc Martens shop. As I already own three pairs of eight-hole boots (cherry red, purple and black) and a pair of T-bar shoes, I shouldn’t really have been looking for another pair of docs. Of course my sneaker collection is quite a bit larger than that (currently 10 pairs, mostly Adio, in various stages of wear). I couldn’t help myself. I bought my first pair of grown-up docs – high-heeled ankle boots with zips up the side (and air-ware soles). When I went back to check out of the hotel later, the lady on the desk reminded me about how I wasn’t going to buy anything else.

 

From Camden, I headed to London’s palace of tack-o-rama, Madame Tussauds. I had been fascinated with the place as a kid but still hadn’t decided whether I would visit. In the end I didn’t. It was quite a process. You had to but a ticket and then wait up to 45 minutes to get in. I was told the exhibition takes an hour-and-a-half to go through and I didn’t really have that kind of time. There were also three really big school groups which wasn’t really the calm experience I was looking for ahead of a 22-hour flight. I decided the best tactic was to head back to Notting Hill, order a beer in the pub and scrawl out some messages on my remaining postcards.

 

Once I was done, I grabbed my bags and headed to Heathrow. Like a good backpacker, I repacked my luggage on the train on the way to the airport (which is better than on the departure lounge floor. The departure lounge was where the fun started. I had to wait for an hour to check-in because the immigration system in Canberra was down and no Australian passports could be processed. It’s a sad day when you have trouble getting into your own country. Immigration is lucky I didn’t wake someone in the middle of the night to ask why it was so hard for me to come home. Armed with the information that the flight left from gate nine, I headed into the duty free store next door and did some final shopping. I also made sure to retrieve some final Australian dollars just in case my little wallet incident left me with no access to my bank when I returned. I changed into my comfy flying clothes and headed for the gate. Only they had changed the gate. And my plane was boarding. At the other end of the terminal. I made it in plenty of time. [‘Last Goodbye’ – Jeff Buckley – Unlike moist of my friends, I came to Jeff Buckley late but after I saw him live at The Royal Theatre on a cold wintry Canberra evening, I was hooked. It was his last Australian tour and he was mesmerizing as a live performer. I don’t care how good your stereo is, you haven’t fully appreciated Jeff if you didn’t see him live.]

 

I was safely on my way home but started getting savage stomach pains about halfway through the flight. I hadn’t had a reaction to the cabin pressure before and never want to have it again. It was excruciating.  I couldn’t sleep so I just watched movies (and took the occasional peak under the window shutter at the morning sky outside). I took the opportunity to see ‘Burn after reading’, which I had meant to get to the cinema to see and ‘Australia’ which I hadn’t. My instincts were correct on both counts. As we flew into Singapore there was a magnificent scene out the plane window as the sun set over the hundreds of cargo ships sitting in the Malacca Strait. I would have got a photo if I had a film camera but alas, you aren’t allowed to use a digital once the plane is in descent.

 

I spent the whole hour in Singapore just walking around. It helped. And when I got back on the plane, the steward asked the girl who had joined the plane and sat in the aisle seat to move into the empty row in front. This gave me three seats to lie across so I managed to get some sleep.

 

On arrival in Sydney, I was very careful about the Customs and Quarantine questions – there was a sign up that Border Security was filming and that’s not really the kind of holiday memento I was looking for. They asked me some questions and checked the bottom of my shoes. They weren’t concerned about my champagne cork, jelly beans souvenired from the Portobello or my (probably synthetic) fur-lined boots.

 

I had cleared Customs by 8am. Unfortunately my flight to Canberra was for 12.50pm. That’s where the Qantas Club membership started to work its magic. I got onto a flight two hours earlier, with the chance to have a shower in the lounge. God bless the Qantas Club. It’s worth considering Qantas flights next time just so I get this kind of treatment wherever there is a Qantas lounge.

 

And then the strangest thing happened. I met a group of five or six Irish guys from just outside Belfast, a few of them pretty cute, who were on their way to Brisbane. Sure they were at least 10 years younger than me and a short conversation in the transfer lounge is a short conversation in the transfer lounge but how irony? And for the record, I recognized the accent as Northern Irish. Speaking of accents, it was actually quite bizarre hearing Australians around me. I had met very few of them on my travels.

 

I arrived back in Canberra Airport greeted with flowers, chocolates and birthday presents. I had actually forgotten about my birthday in the haze of exhaustion. And when I arrived home I was greeted with cuddles from my puppy. It has taken me a couple of days to readjust to being home. I know it sounds strange after just five weeks away but my house felt weird, a lot bigger than the places I had been staying over the past five weeks. On Saturday night I woke up from a dream and it took a full ten minutes before I realised where I was.

 

And I can’t wait to go again – I am already planning my Eastern European trip for the last half of 2010. And a mini-break to Queensland later in the year. And of course the Madness show in a couple of weeks. But for now it’s back to work. I’ve got to pay the credit card company somehow. [‘Dreamworld’ – Something for Kate – I usually find Something for Kate pretty boring but this is a pretty good cover, staying faithful to the original Oils song that’s loaded with Australian references and I’m misappropriating the lyric ‘Your dream world is just about to end’]

Living like a rockstar

When I arrived back to the hotel, my bags had already been taken to my room so I climbed the stairs to Room 16 – the infamous round room – at the Portobello Hotel and turned the key. It was plush – opulent to the extreme. I put down my shopping, explored the room and then laid down on the soft doona stretched across the perfectly round bed, popped the champagne cork and ordered some room service (mixed olives and tapenades to accompany my champagne and fish pie with salmon, smoked haddock and prawns for dinner). After weeks of budget hotels and hostels, it felt decadent, just the way I had intended. 

 

The room was beautiful, just the way it was pictured on the website, with a beautiful canopy hanging over the bed, a couch, the antique shower and also a regular shower and a small mini bar and sink hidden away in a cabinet. There were robes and slippers (I have stayed places with robes before but never slippers) and lots of luxurious big towels. [‘Sweet Dreams’ – The Eurythmics – it sounds very 80s now but I remember thinking of this as very different at the time it was released – probably because it wasn’t sung by a boy with a mullet.]

 

I lay on the bed sipping my champagne, utilising the free internet and watching some telly on the Bang and Olufsen screen, waiting for my food to arrive. Sure, the Portobello is a luxe hotel designed to be perfect for a love in with that special someone or in the case of many guests, that group of special someones you brought home from your show – there are mirrors everywhere but not in a tacky on the ceiling way. Subtle smoky mirrors surround the bath while there is a gilt edges oval mirror at each end of the room. However, its decadence is also matched with a sense of homeliness from the private gardens at the back of the hotel and the suburban obscurity of its entrance to the friendly welcoming staff. It’s easy to see why so many rock stars choose the hotel. Tina Turner is rumoured to have loved it so much that she bought the house next door. My reason for choosing it (apart from the opulence) was that The Sex Pistols stayed here (in 1976 and 1996).

 

After dinner (and some champagne and those Harrods chocolates) I tested out the antique shower. First using the spray, then the shower and finally enjoying a bath. After that it was more champagne and chocolates (and wondering whether at 40 I was too old to become a rockstar’s girlfriend. Probably but it was certainly a great way to spend my birthday. [‘Today’ – The Smashing Pumpkins – the perfect pop song, this reminds me of Canberra winters playing stereo round robin with friends]

 

In the morning I awoke late, taking full advantage of the 12pm checkout. I decided on the full English breakfast and had it delivered to my room, enjoying the bird song from the garden as I ate. I then bade farewell to the luxury, leaving my bags at the hotel for collection later in the day.

Shop ’til you drop

Happy Birthday to me! My first task on my birthday was to pack up my bags and check into the Portobello Hotel. Unlike most of the ritzy hotel’s clients, I arrived with a backpack on, having walked from The Notting Hill Gate tube station. Often, in an establishment such as this, the staff will treat someone who looks like a smelly backpacker, like a smelly backpacker, less important than their wealthy celebrity clients. That didn’t happen to me here.

 

The ladies at the desk were lovely and chatty and asked about my trip – I told them it was my birthday and they said they hoped I had a very special night here and a happy birthday. It was only about 9.30am but they assured me the room would be ready in 20 minutes or so. I was happy just to leave my bags with them and head out for the day. I feared that if I got into the room, I wouldn’t leave and I still had things I wanted to do.

 

I decided my birthday was going to be about pampering and spoiling myself. I decided against spa treatments or things that I could do in Australia (or more cheaply in Asia). Besides I would have the luxury of the Portobello for the night. So shopping was the first order of the day. I caught another red bus which went past Kensington Palace as well as Hyde Park (which is huge).

 

I started with Harvey Nichols. Like any AbFab fan worth their salt, I was keen to find out why this store was made famous in the show as the pinnacle of shopping for fashmag queens like Eddie and Pats. The answer was simple – it is the top end of UK department stores – where clothes are categorized by designer rather than type. I have to admit I did look at and love the Vivienne Westwood collection, despite the fact none of it was ever going to fit me. I toyed with the idea that, for me, owning a pair of Vivienne Westwood shoes would be like Jimmy Choos to others. The only problem was that this season, Vivienne has quite a thing for plastic shoes. They were very cute and well designed but man-made fibres, let alone plastic, don’t really work too well for me. [‘Anarchy in the UK’ – The Sex Pistols – OK yes, now my scrawling is prompting the music choices but this is appropriate as Vivienne Westwood had almost as much of a profile in the UK punk movement as Malcolm McLaren.]

 

From Harvey Nichols, it was time for the other end of the scale with Top Shop. As you would expect, it is filled to the brim with cheap clothing inspired by the catwalk. And if Topshop is anything to go by, there is still some life left in both the balloon skirt’s second coming and the inspiration from vintage dressing, not to mention actual vintage dressing – Topshop has a range of vintage (second-hand) clothes as well but nothing in sizes over 14.

 

Then it was on to Selfridges, yet another huge department store full of designer labels. It was here that for the first time I felt sickened by the excess. There was a guard, guarding the handbags. When society gets to the stage that a device used to carry your stuff around needs someone to guard it in a store, things have gone too far. I am sure those that love their handbags will disagree with me – my faithful tardis handbag, which cost me about $12 and can probably go in the washing machine (or at least be wiped down) has served me well throughout this trip. Yes I have a suede number that cost about $40 from a local designer in Balmain but I’m too afraid to wear it that I might spill stuff on it. The idea of a handbag that costs more than I will probably ever spend on a car seems a bit excessive to me. Don’t buy the handbag, save on the guard’s salary and send the money to vaccinate children dying of AIDS in Africa. Sure I have a sneaker collection but they are well worn (and I have never paid over $100 for a pair – most were sample bargains at about $50). [‘Minister for Planets’ – Augie March and Archie Roach from the album Corroboration which teams indigenous artists with white Australian artists – it’s worth a spin if you haven’t heard it – there is also a great Deborah Cheetham and Wicked Beat Sound System track.]

 

From here I wandered along excess street, better known as Sloane Street which stretches from Hyde Park to the Kings Road (my next iconic destination). You name the label and they have a store here – Prada, Pucci, Armani… and every store has a cute young male attendant at the door – I surmised this was for the following reasons – a) as a guard, like the handbag guard at Liberty), b) to charm middle aged cashed up women and gay men into parting with a fortune and c) to keep undesirables including smelly backpackers, such as myself, out of the store. I will point out that for my shopping trip I had eschewed the army pants and (for me at least) I was quite chic – in boots, black tights, a denim skirt, a funky All Tomorrow’s Parties t-shirt and my black jacket from Germany. I was carrying my fleece jacket for when it was really cold and windy.

 

From here I sauntered along the Kings Road, once the home of punk culture in England – Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood’s infamous shop was located here – but now sadly, just a regular shopping strip with a few boutiques and some chain stores. Down one end was the shop at Bluebird, which features clothes and accessories by up and coming designers. There was some fabulous stuff in here, particularly some of the really original marquisette jewellery, but it all had a price tag to match the opulent décor.

I did buy a pair of shoes in the Kings Road but they were from a chain store I had seen all over London. The sales assistant was really nice and at least I can say I bought them in the Kings Road. I believe Vivienne Westwood still had an outlet in the Kings Road for a long time but alas no longer. [‘Stranded’ – The Saints – Australia’s contribution to the London punk scene – I have seen the saints three times in the past couple of years and can report the shows that included Ed Keupper were awesome and the one without was terrible.]

 

From the Kings Road I headed for London’s shopping institution, Harrods. It is as twee as you expect with 1920s doormen still at each entrance and similar uniforms for staff, particularly in the food halls. Harrods is renowned for carrying quite conservative clothing ranges but they were the first place to offer a plus size range. Unfortunately, despite having some designer stuff in there, the clothes were aimed at your Maggie Tabberer style larger woman. I know as an (eep) 40 year-old fat clothes shopper, I am never going to be able to wear over the knee socks with skirts that barely cover my bum but isn’t there a happy medium? Do I have to look like someone off a soap opera with big hair and big swathes of fabric?

 

After my disappointing foray into Harrods fashion, I headed for the food halls. Harrods food halls may not be regarded as the best in Britain but they far outdo either the Myer or David Jones food halls. You could have a gourmet lunch or dinner here (or pick it up to take it home). Along with all manner of deli items, there were pre-prepared curries, quiches etc and exquisitely decorated cakes. Instead of cake that could get squashed on my travels, I chose a small pack of Harrods chocolate pralines, decorated with the store’s name in gold.

 

From here I headed to my birthday indulgence, a proper afternoon tea in the Laudree tea rooms at Harrods. Laudree is a French patisserie that has a concession in Harrods. It was wonderful – delicious smoked salmon and cucumber sandwiches, mini pastries and an array of tarts, cakes and macaroons, accompanied by yea. My favourite was the rose flavoured macaroon, with fresh raspberries and lychees and rose-flavoured cream. It was scrumptious. It was a lovely indulgence and one I think should be repeated. I have grown quite fond of tea. Now I just need to purchase a teapot so I can do tea the proper way at home. Harrods (and most other stores in London) had plenty of teapots – I just wasn’t sure they would make it home in one piece. [‘This Charming Man’ – The Smiths – Up against some of my music from the 90s, The Smiths don’t seem quite as depressing as I thought they were at the time. The same can’t be said for another early 80s fave of mine – Tears for Fears]

 

After my afternoon tea, I decided it was high time I headed back to Notting Hill to enjoy my other five star indulgence. I hopped on a bus that was supposed to take me there but I got on the wrong bus and ended up in Putney. I realized I was going the wrong way when we passed Earl’s Court. I had purposely avoided going to the home of Australians in London but ended up passing through by accident. It wasn’t hard to tell this was a backpacker haven – the streets were strewn with takeaways and Western Union outlets. Eventually we reached Putney Bridge where I decided to get off the bus (fortuitously as it was very close to the tube station and right on the edge of Zone 2. From here I could get a direct train to Notting Hill on the district line so it worked out well – I got to see another part of London and it didn’t delay me too much.

West End [girl]

Dominion Theatre where the show has been running since 2002

Dominion Theatre where the show has been running since 2002

It turned out ‘We will Rock You’ was the perfect musical choice for me. I have long been a Ben Elton fan (his writing not his acting) ever since The Young Ones and Blackadder days. I was one of those people that watched Stark more than once as well. This was laced with the same kind of humour and pop culture references that litter Elton’s work and also as many references to Queen as he could jam in.

 

It followed the story of how two misfits – a boy and girl – saved the world from the banality of the Killer Queen and her mass-produced banal Radio Ga-ga (300 years in the future) by playing real music on real instruments (a topic close to my heart). And it was amazing how many songs they managed to shoe-horn in. Highlander got another Guernsey with ‘Who wants to live forever’, the intro to ‘Flash Gordon’ featured in a mind control scene and they even managed to get ‘Fat-bottomed girls’ in there. [‘Another one bites the dust’ – Queen – this was my introduction to Queen and still remains one of my favourite songs. Queen have long been out of favour with those that are cool but there are some great tunes amongst their catalogue. And throughout my lifetime, through many different Queen fans, they have provided a soundtrack to various parts of my life. I have had more than one boyfriend who favoured Queen.]

 

My favourite bit was in the names the rebel Bohemians had given themselves, after rock stars. There was a guy named Madonna, complete with conical bustier, a girl named after Freddy, the female lead, Meat(loaf), Bob the Builder and the leader, which got a lot of laughs for their misinterpretation of history, was called Britney Spears. They also had a bit of a tribute to ‘Only the Good Die Young’ which mentioned Buddy Holly, Kurt Cobain and of course Freddy Mercury, amongst others.

 

The Dominion Theatre, one of the West End’s biggest,  was one of those old style theatres with leather seats that folded up (I was seated in the stalls), a balcony and really ornate boxes in the wings (like the ones on The Muppets). I giggled my way through the three hour show (there was an intermission). It was definitely a good way to spend my birthday eve. I had thought about seeing a band while I was in London but hadn’t seen anything that appealed to me – it was a Monday night after all – and decided a west-end show was a quintessential London experience. Besides I have the V Festival to look forward to. Yay! Madness! I have been looking at flights to go to at least one sideshow (as I have just had five weeks off, I need to schedule around work) but I’m not sure my bank manager would like that very much.

London, city of icons and monuments

 

Day three in London was about getting out and seeing all those iconic places I had heard about throughout my life (and a few monuments as well – you can’t really go to London without seeing Big Ben.). My first stop was Carnaby Street – the once famed corridor of fashion shopping is now filled with international chain stores and has an archway at either end proudly announcing that you have reached the iconic street. Carnaby was Liberty, one of Britain’s many department stores. Liberty is housed in a Tudor building, one of the few I saw in London.

 

From here I walked down Oxford Street towards Leicester Square. I had heard there were ticket boxes in Leicester Square where you could get half-priced tickets to that evening’s shows. I decided that seeing a west-end show would be a fun thing to do in London and a fun way to spend my birthday eve. I could have gone for a really serious play but that, to me, is not what the West end is about. When I think West End, I think musicals. Monty Python’s Spamalot and Tim Firth’s Our House (which features the music of Madness) weren’t showing. There were about 30 musicals based directly on films including Dirty Dancing and Zorro – seeing a film on stage was not really what I had in mind. I chose the Ben Elton penned ‘We will Rock You’, based on the music of Queen.

 

From the box office, I headed to Trafalgar Square. Like the Italians, the British aren’t afraid to erect a monument or two to their heroes, such as the statue of Lord Nelson high atop the thing in Trafalgar Square. I didn’t see too many of the famed pigeons. As a matter of fact I didn’t see many at Il Duomo either. So there you go – winter is a good time to visit if you want to avoid pigeons.

 

This was the point at which I realised two things a) I wasn’t all that far from Buckingham Palace b) the changing of the guard was due to start in about 10 minutes so with these things in mind, I headed towards the Palace. I didn’t really see the changing of the guard. Like lots of other monuments, you have to be there really early and stand around for hours for that. I wasn’t that interested in the pomp and ceremony. However, I did manage to follow the mounted regiment up to the gate. In order to keep things nice and clean for the Queen (and the tourists), there is a special pooper scooper vehicle that follows the horses up the mall in front of Buckingham Palace. [‘The Few’ – Billy Bragg – Billy is one of my favourite singer songwriters and he’s someone who puts his effort where his mouth is, running grassroots campaigns to make a difference. One of the most pertinent things I ever heard him say was about violent protest action. He said if you blow up a McDonalds for exploiting its workers, there’s another McDonalds around the corner. He suggested that organizing a trade union inside McDonalds was a better solution.]

 

From here I headed towards Westminster Abbey. Unfortunately it was closed for a service for Commonwealth Day. I did manage to see the tail end of a parade of Commonwealth flags being taken into the abbey for the event. I was informed by the two London bobbies at the gate that if I cam back in a few hours and braved the crowds, I might get a glimpse of the Queen or PM ahead of the 3.30pm service.

 

I walked on to the houses of parliament (and Big Ben of course). It’s not until you get this close to the big clock that you realize there is a lot of gold gilt edging shining in the sunlight. In fact, I was quite surprised at the amount of gold decoration I saw on the outside of palaces and government buildings like parliament in Britain. I had expected it in Italy but not here. I have no idea whether it is actually real gold. I suspect not anymore but probably originally. I wasn’t as repulsed by the opulence here in the same way as I was by the Vatican. It’s probably because the majority of British people support this system of government with a monarch as head of state, that the Queen actually pays tax to the state and that a large portion of the wealth actually belongs to the people of Britain rather than the royal family personally and that the government actually has some say in determining how much money the royals receive. The Vatican doesn’t have these sorts of controls and church members play no part in determining the political direction of the church or how its money is spent.

 

There was an interesting juxtaposition of images standing on the edge of Parliament Square out the front of Westminster Abbey. In the foreground, in front of Big Ben were the flags of the Commonwealth nations flickering in the breeze. In the background, on the other side of the river, you could see the London Eye, which is essentially a massive ferris wheel. The whole thing looked like a carnival, which is probably quite appropriate for parliament. [‘Sexuality’ – Billy Bragg – one the easiest interviews I have ever done was with Billy. What you see is what you get. I spoke to him just days after 9/11 and it was one of the most interesting interview conversations I’ve ever had.]

 

I decided to see if I could get a glimpse of Gordon Brown collecting the paper at Number 10. The humble nature of the terraced house as the PM’s residence in Britain has always appealed to me against the opulence of the royal palaces. Don’t even bother – there is tighter security there than at the lodge. All those news shots you get of media packs hounding the PM outside his front door must be gathered by people with appropriate security clearances. Not only are there guards and those pylons with the red lights across the top at the entrance to Downing Street, there is also a double gate arrangement and a guard house. Lucky only other politicians live on the street these days.

 

Just around the corner from Number 10 are the Cabinet War Rooms. This was one of the most interesting museums I have ever seen. It is in the bunkers built to house Winston Churchill and his cabinet during WWII. It was recreated in enormous detail with each room laid out as it would have been during the war, right down to the implements in the kitchen, the typewriters and telephones and the war strategy maps on the walls. I stopped in a t the café to have afternoon tea of finger sandwiches and jam sponge. The menu (which they wouldn’t let me souvenir) was written like a ration book. The museum also had the best gift shop I have seen, including recreations of metal advertising signs from the period, ration books, cookbooks featuring wartime recipes using rations and books created by the government with helpful hints about health and making your clothing rations go further. My favourite was the dig for victory campaign which encouraged people to build home gardens to feed themselves during the war. [‘Zoot Suit Riot’ – Cherry Poppin’ Daddies – swing is such great dancing music – if only I was a slightly better dancer. And I love the clothes. For the record, I bought my first piece of vintage clothing, a lace dress from Route 66, back in 1989 so you can see why I was enamored with the London vintage clothing craze.]

 

From here I walked across the Westminster Bridge and along the South Bank of the Thames to Tate Modern. The interior design in the building is amazing, even more impressive than the Powerhouse in Sydney which also utilizes a disused power station. I was a little disappointed with the exhibition though – the minimalist gallery was closed, due to be replaced with another exhibition. Tate Modern works on a timeline of art from the early 20th century and how you can do that without minimalism is beyond me. Like the Spanish gallery, there is an over-fascination with cubism and surrealism here. Sure I am impressed by Picasso, Dali, Magritte and Duchamp but enough already. There was also a temporary gallery of 80s paintings. It reminded me of the kind of art we studied and worked on at school. Like everything about the 80s, paintings were supposed to be big, huge and mostly abstract. The highlight for me though was the pop art gallery, seeing Roy Lichtenstein’s Whaam and Wall Explosion II up close and personal.

 

From the Tate, I wandered to Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre – I decided not to pay for the tour and settled on just seeing the outside. In the end it is a recreation, not the real theatre and the experience would be in seeing a play there, recreated in the way it would have been seen in Shakespeare’s time. I decided that it was probably best left for my next visit to London.

 

I decided to head back to the hostel to get ready for my West End show on a London red bus so a) I could see the territory I had been covering underground on the tube and b) I could actually get to take a ride on a red bus. When there was that huge controversy about the government getting rid of London’s double-decker red buses. It turns out that what they were talking about was the really old buses with the conductor at the back door, as seen in about 100 carry-on movies. There are more modern double-decker red buses everywhere. There are still some of the old ones on a few heritage routes but I didn’t manage to catch one.

Tragedy in Northern Ireland

This post was written on Sunday. Since then there has been another murder, this time a police officer, in a different part of Northern Ireland but the sentiments expressed below still stand.

 

My visit to Belfast has just taken on a whole different perspective. I have just watched my first news in a few days to the news that two British soldiers were killed by the Real IRA in Antrim, just west of Belfast. I had read yesterday in the paper that in the past 12 months, attacks on NI Police had increased and the police chief had just employed a number of intelligence gathering techniques to stop an attack like the one that occurred last night.

 

I still believe that it was perfectly safe for me to visit Northern Ireland – I would be more likely to be a target for the drunken rage of some glass wielding idiot in Canberra or any terrorist indiscriminately targeting Australians or Caucasians than I would for the Real IRA or indeed any other group in Northern Ireland. It does, though, show that my feeling that peace in Belfast was hanging by a thread was correct. It is a sobering thought that makes me glad that I had the luck to be born in Australia.