Exploring the Thames near St Pauls cathedral
To actually give myself some non work time in the evening and to find more opportunities in the day time to sneakily take a few photos, I took my camera to work.
During the work day I had to move offices, so I took a few photos while on the go. Then after work, I just wandered around in my work clothes instead of going back to my hotel first, to maximise my 1.5 hours free time in the day.
Both journeys kind of went to the same eastern part of London near St Pauls and Liverpool street station as you shall see. It is an area I used to visit on my first couple of trips, but I have not been there lately.
I am starting to be annoyed at daylight. It makes for boring photos when its always daylight. Generally when I am on holidays the evenings are darkness, and different due to the day time which is lightness. Basically I wish everything, buildings, shops, lights etc. wasnt always all the same. London is a bit better than Paris in this respect, in that theres some variety in the buildings, but its still pretty grey and boring. The above was worded poorly, I dont care, read it backwards it makes more sense that way.
Tomorrow I have to get up early and go to somewhere near Birmingham for the day, I have no idea what time I will get back. So there may not even be an update tomorrow!
Before that I must fight the slow internet and try and go asleep at 8pm in broad daylight with the noise from the pub downstairs. Good times.
St Pauls from front on, with the early morning sun that has already been in the sky for about 5 hours by now.
In the evening now, and despite still being in central London, here is a modern block of apartments. I had no idea such things existed. They have nice metal rails for birds to perch on.
One of the fancy sandwich / salad cafes where I had dinner recently is Pret a Manger, every now and then you see a special vegetarian only branch of the same store. Interesting idea, the only time I saw something similar was vege only Subway stores in India.
Regulations around car washes seem to be a bit lax in London, just some dudes with drums of chemicals running down the drain as they scrape grease and toxins off filthy vans. I looked up if I was spelling lax right, I am, its a relaxed way of saying relaxed.
This part of London could pass as an Australian city, modern taller buildings. Not enough trees to be Australia though. Actually not a single tree at all!
Children have constructed this fish out of plastic bottles. Once the exhibition is over they will take it down to Dover and float it out to sea to see how far it goes before it disintegrates and becomes delicious sea plastic.
London bridge, in the news today. It has a lot of pedestrian protecting furniture now. The crowd going across here is immense.
I was a bit closer to tower bridge in the afternoon than in the morning. It is further east than I remembered.
A very strange fountain. It looks like a used bit of filthy shade cloth floating in a puddle. But no, its cooper I think.
A Britishly pompous concert with roaring gaiety broke out. Featuring the Wizard of Oz theme complete with whistles and bells.
Now check out my healthy dinner, from yet another casual sit in restaurant chain! Vegetarian sushi / gyoza. Really nice. They have thoughtfully provided self serve GOCHUJANG, so I added Korean pepper sauce to vegetarian sushi.
Regents park is kind of hidden away but absolutely enormous
Today I went to somewhere near Birmingham and back. The original plan was to drive, but upon checking the traffic situation, that changed to train. It was only about an hour on the train to my destination, but a return ticket cost about $170 AUD! Outrageous.
Despite heading to the great unwashed north, I managed not not get stabbed, so now I am a statistical outlier. Also god damn it spellchecker, outlier is a word! AND SPELLCHECKER IS A WORD TOO! The red underline I see when typing this that identifies spelling errors is near on useless.
Anyway, a day on the train and trapped in an office meant I needed over 20k steps this evening, in limited time. To the maps I went, pondering nearby options, there was a huge park, Regents park, very near my hotel. How have I not been there before? It is absolutely enormous. For whatever reason it does not border any main road, you have to go 1 road back to find an entrance.
The park exceeded my expectations, and allowed me to run around and get lots of my steps.
It even had free bathrooms.
After running about aimlessly in the unexpected unseasonal sunshine, it was time to find another healthy dinner, then photograph some garbage, then come back to my hotel and eat some fruit salad. Fairly standard for London.
I must admit, its a bit boring! And thats because there are no contrasts. I know I am working and not on holidays, but when I normally travel I get a day and a night, and I get huge density of people in cities and when hiking I get contrasting absolute isolation. In both London and Paris everything is the most median percentile of everything, at all times.
The non formal area is a large open grass area that you are allowed to walk on. It felt wrong to walk on grass after getting yelled at by commandos in Paris protecting the grass.
Dinner was again healthy and vegetarian. The soup is a Thai lentil concoction, the salad is Mexican fiery something with sweet potato. I therefore ate Thaixican.
When you have no bins in your city, you have piles of bags. They make for a beautiful modern art installation on every corner.
And here is where you can line up and pay 5 pounds to appear in a spot where they filmed Harry Potter. Over 100,000 people a day do so, generating half a million pounds of revenue into J K Rowlings wizard empire per day (figures may be completely made up).
There are currently 2 comments - click to add
David on 2019-07-19 said:
You wanted to see pictures of a shed in an industrial park near a sewage treatment plant and an abattoir?
adriana on 2019-07-19 said:
No photos of Birmingham?
Inside Tottenham stadium, walking around china town and M&M's world
Now the real London has arrived. It has been cold wet and windy all day. The start of this evening was probably the driest part of the day, but now at 7:30pm, its pouring rain. So thats the weather update.
This morning I went to a brand new football stadium, for work, at Tottenham, which my spellchecker insists should be HOTTENTOTT because apparently hottentott is a word and Tottenham is not. The stadium is all shiny and smells nice (no pot pourri of vomit plus urine yet) with an amazing array of beer related amenities, including a bottoms up fast filling plastic cup system that can dispense 10,000 beers in 1 minute across the stadium, and the newest contender for the worlds longest bar. Beer consumption optimisation is a key metric. The cup filling thing was actually interesting to me, you slam a cup over a tap, beer fills from the bottom, you pull it off the tap and a magnet floating inside the cup seals the hole in the bottom of the cup, anyway thats boring work stuff.
This evening I went to Chinatown, which is still mainly Cantonese rather than actual China but very busy. Then I found an M&M's multilevel department store. Read that twice, I could not believe it, I had to walk the full length of every floor just to gawk at how large a chocolate themed store could be. They also had free bathrooms. Bizzaro candy covered chocolate place was more packed than the nearby multi level Harry Potter store.
And on that note, Harry Potter store was filled with Chinese people, but Harry Potter is banned on the mainland, as are all movies related to magic or time travel, so presumably mainlanders think Harry Potter is a true story.
Tonights pictures are really bad, grey skies, rain, had my hands full of fruit salad.
My walk from the tube station to the new stadium was a couple of kilometres, in the rain. Because why would a 62,000 person stadium need access to public transport? On my way I passed a shop cat. He was very sleepy.
Here is the stadium, unlike Australian stadiums at literally has houses attached. On all sides! Very weird.
I was early, so the cafe in the giant Sainsburys in the car park provided a spot to sit. Avocado on toast, 2 pounds! They do not grow avocados in England. We grow them in Australia, which must by why Avocado on toast costs more than a house deposit in Australia.
I broke various rules by taking this photo. The real grass soccer pitch is on wheels, and slides out of the stadium in three sections. Under it is a fake grass pitch for American Football games (NFL) of which they only play 2 a year. They constructed all of that for 2 games a year. The gantries over the pitch are heat / grow lights to help the grass grow.
Now we jump forward to the early evening, and this is in an area where 7 laneways meet at a pole that drunk people use to urinate on. I believe its called 7 dials.
Many pubs and shops in London are decorated with similar fake floral displays. This guy is phoning the royal sunflower appreciation association to report a licensing breach.
Inside the multi level Harry Potter store. Everyone is taking selfies with huge selfie pole stick things. I take a discrete photo without getting in the way of anyone and of course, some dork in a wizard costume that works there tells me in ye olde English 'pardon me fine sir, but cameras are not permitted in our magical establishment', to which I retorted, 'fine, then watch me disappear'.
They still give out these free horrifically bad for the environment advertising newspapers at every train station in London.
The busiest part of town. Leicester Square, with its German cuckoo clock liberated from the Nazis of Switzerland.
Random shot of grey identical uninviting buildings with big red buses. One of the red buses is green.
My dinner tonight was back to Leon, my favorite chain in London. Tonight I had Moroccan meatballs with rice and salad. Very nice. Right now I am eating my usual kilo of fruit salad. I dont know what to do tomorrow, I suspect it will be raining. Might be museum day. I am not paying $170 to take a train somewhere so I can stand in the rain and wait to come back again.
There are currently 2 comments - click to add
David on 2019-07-20 said:
There are 2 brands of chocolate that you find in mainland Chinese convenience stores, m&m's and snickers.
It is strange that all the other options don't seem to have taken off there
Also when you say Chinese, I think there are many Japanese, Korean, Hong Kong, Singaporeon and Taiwanese tourists.
I heard a lot of people speaking Japanese.
jenny on 2019-07-20 said:
We definitely do not need an M&m department store here for fat people. Notice it was also full of Chinese
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mother on 2019-07-18 said:
Dinner looks delicious. Am enjoying the variety of architecture in London. There don't seem to be many black or Asian people in the areas you are walking?