I love London! Seeing this City with the buzz of Olympic Fever was great. While in College I spent 5-6 weeks in London. I got a good feel for the City and saw a ton of the touristy things in January 2000. I didn’t feel obligated to run around like a wild man trying to see everything in just 48 hours.
I woke up Saturday morning (22 hours after my arrival at Heathrow). I had a quick bite to eat with my friends who were hosting me and I decided to pop down and take a walk along the river Thames. I took the Jubilee Line down to the London Bridge station. My plan for the day was to see the Bridge with the Olympic Rings, then I’d walk across the river and make my way to Big Ben, eating lunch along the way then hope back on the Jubilee Line and go to Wembley Park for the Football Game.
While in College, I often ate at Pizza Express and I had intended on eating here again – just for old times sake, not because it was a destination. Unfortunately, each Pizza Express I came across was closed. Such is life.
I stood on London Bridge and took a picture of Tower Bridge – such a quintessential London landmark. This was even a greater treat with the Olympic Rings flying high. I debated on popping over to the Tower of London and being an uber-tourist again, but thought better of it — since I really only had about 2 hours of site seeing time.
I continued walking along the north side of the Thames – along the river walk. I passed by the rebuilt Globe Theater, then I came across the Eye of London. When I visited in 2000 the Eye hadn’t opened yet. — it actually opened about a month after I left the UK. While, I don’t care for heights, I do think this is someplace I’d like to visit and take a ride. I didn’t do it this time, again, because I didn’t have a whole lot of time to kill.
I really had forgotten how far this walk was. In my mind I figured it would be about 30 minutes allowing for time to stop and take photos and to really enjoy the unexpected London heat. This 2.5 mile walk around the River took me just about an hour. I managed to make it to Big Ben and saw a beautiful view with both the Union Jack and the Olympic flags blowing in the wind. Such a great, once in a lifetime view.
By now, it was 14h00 and the game would start at 15h00 and the trek from Big Ben to Wembley would take about 40 minutes. I decided to head up and spend a bit of time at the Olympic shops outside of the Stadium. I figured there would be some Olympic tchotchkes that I could bring back to some friends and colleagues.
I hopped back on the Jubilee Line and was heading Northwest the 13 stops from Westminster. Then I decided that I wasn’t quite ready to go to the game. I wanted a beer at a pub along the way. I hopped off at the very next stop, which happened to be Baker Street. For those of you unfamiliar with the Baker Street station, when you exit you are in a very touristy area and are just a few feet from 221B Baker Street — Sherlock Holmes’ House. I walked around the block and found a nice little pub and ordered a pint. I sat at the bar and drank my beer for about 25 minutes, then headed back to the Jubilee Line and worked my way back up to Wembley.
There was one thing that London did very well during the Olympics was the “Pink People”. Outside of the major tube stops and various attractions one would encounter people who were wearing pink clothes (a jacket, a windbreaker or a shirt). These folks were equipped with maps and timetables — they were City Customer Service people. I did stop off at Baker Street and asked a couple of questions: 1) How does it take to get to Wembley (which I already knew) and which Tube Line is the best? and 2) What pub do you recommend within walking distance from here? Both answers were quick and accurate. I found out later that most of these Pink People were actually volunteers. How great would it be if London (or Chicago or New York) would have these volunteers to help visitors?
Did you do some non-Olympic related tourism while in London? When visiting the City what are your go-to locales? When sitting on the Tube (or the subway, the El, the Metro, Max, or BART) do you get an urge for a beer and just hop off and find the first place around? If you do, does that mean you are an alcoholic?
Be the first to know when a new post is published: sign up to receive them via email or directly in your RSS Reader. Follow me on Twitter or Google Plus too!