mjr
Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
- Location
- mostly Norfolk, sometimes Somerset
Bloody kids - they think they're driving the.... train:Nah, there's always bloody kids there![]()
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4kSAaqhBb0
Bloody kids - they think they're driving the.... train:Nah, there's always bloody kids there![]()
Did you know it used to be longer?While you’re near the Thames go on the Emirates Air Line https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/emirates-air-line/ much cheaper than the London Eye rip off and just as breath taking.
I'd second the suggestion of the Museum of London - I went in for the first time in years a few weeks ago and there's lots of delights. Also the British Museum - there's a small (but not cheap) exhibition on comparative religion on at the moment in conjunction with the R4 series. For someone steeped in religious practice it's fascinating, and I want to go back.Day off tomorrow (birthday present to myself) and I fancy a trip to the smoke with tlh. Intent is to climb the monument, take lunch in Zedels, see the lights on Oxford St. I quite fancy a museum or a gallery but which one? Sir John Soanes appeals, as does the Horniman though it is a way out of central
What else should we try to pack in? What's a hit and what's a miss in December 2017?
I love visiting Greenwich Observatory - really interesting. The park is lovely and the food stalls in Greenwich market are great too.
It is good but not really a central London attraction. I take the kids at least twice a year.The Horniman Museum is an absolute delight.....stuffed full of all kinds of fascinating stuff. You can get a train from London Bridge to Forest Hill that takes fifteen minutes. It's well worth a visit.
The public transport connection between the two is ..... errrmmmm somewhat lacking and definitely indirect.Food stalls are indeed lovely, but only at the weekends
But nothing to stop you doing Horneman and Greenwich as they are both SE
The public transport connection between the two is ..... errrmmmm somewhat lacking and definitely indirect.
Not one I'd care to do both of in the same day - unless I was shelling for a taxi from Greenwich to the Horniman.
(I live a 15 minute walk away from the Horniman).
offering my tube seat to people
I learnt my lesson on the Piccadilly Line. I was leaning against the padded rests at the end of the carriage, and a guy boarded relying on a cane. All the seated passengers worked hard to avoid eye contact and thus be forced to give up their seats. So I of course gave him my cushion and exchanged brief pleasantries about what peanuts everyone else was being. Because we were both basically standing at that point and I was less than a metre from him, he decided to reward my kindness by attempting to introduce me to Jesus, his lord and saviour. For 20 minutes!!
Never make eye contact on the tube.