Here we are at the Denver airport during our five hour
wait for our Iceland Air flight.
this is what Iceland looked like from the airport. In the field in the distance were acres and acres of blue lupin flowers. Pretty.
Neither
one of us slept well Sunday night – combination of anticipation and, for my
part, a different sleeping environment.
We don’t look too tired in the first picture.
I think we do here
– this is in the London subway (the tube) after flying all night. We slept somewhat
on the plane – thanks to sleep masks and melatonin and ear plugs – but certainly
not a quality sleep.
We had what seemed like a mile to walk from the tube
station and the apartment that Jamilyn rented for the week. Here is the street it was on.
Here is the outside of the apartment building.
Don’t you love the name of the store next
door? This is the view from our back porch.
And this is what we had going past constantly
until late at night.
You sort-of got
used to it. The apartment was small but
very nice. Shower was not so great
(again! This is my summer of bad
showers, I guess) It wavered between hot
and cold with no rhyme or reason. It was
located in the Indian / Middle-eastern part of London. We walked by this neighborhood every day on
our way to the tube.
We also walked past
rows of stalls that were set up along the sidewalk that were selling clothes
and food and cell phones. We found a
fantastic, large grocery store nearby called Sainsburys that had a delightful
gluten-free section with bread that was heavenly.
I wish we had the FreeFrom brand here in the
states.
Our first full day – Wednesday – we took a train out to
Hampton Court where King Henry the 8th lived. It was very impressive.
Gorgeous gardens everywhere.
We got back into London mid-afternoon and
Juli, Jami, and Kason rode the London Eye while I sat and enjoyed people watching
and visiting with a few folks who shared my bench.
Thursday we braved the crowds and went to Buckingham
Palace to watch the changing of the guard.
The marching band played John Phillip Sousa’s National Emblem March in honor of the 4th of July. That was cool. We walked around a nearby park and saw the
outside of Westminister Abby (it was closed for a function).
this was a a quintessential sight in London - the phone booth, the double-decker bus and Westminsiter Abby
We visited St. Paul’s Cathedral and climbed
more steps than I want to remember to get a view from the base of the
dome. Got some great shots of London, though.
Brad joined us in the afternoon
and we all went out to eat near Covent Garden before going to the theater to see
the Lion King. It was really
impressive.
We rode on the top of a double-decker bus to get there. That was fun.
this was the view
On Friday, Brad, Jami, and Kason went to Harry Potter
world and Juli and I explored more of downtown London. We saw the rosetta stone in the British
Museum. We ate lunch at a cute little gluten-free
café. We went to Trafalgar Square which
has the Acadamy of St. Martin in the Fields (see below)
and the National Gallery. We saw
some of the 19th century art on display and we would have loved to
have returned to hear a concert in the Acadamy that night but we had
babysitting duty as Brad and Jami wanted to see London at night from the
Eye. We walked across the London Bridge.
We visited M&M World
We had a VERY early morning departure on Saturday to
catch our flight out of London
Looks like you saw some great sights in London. Did you eat any fish and/or chips?
ReplyDeletenaw. there was a place that had gluten free fish and chips but only on Tuesday and I missed that opportunity. we ate Italian before Lion King and they had gf options!
ReplyDeleteI love all the gardens! They are so well-kept!
ReplyDelete