Tag:westminster

Westminster Abbey & High Tea

On our first full day in London, we went to Westminster Abbey, then the London Eye, followed by Mad Hatter High Tea at the Sanderson Hotel.  Having no idea how the trains and oyster cards work, we headed to Woodside Station – bought an Oyster card. I loaded it with £20 and waited for our train to the city.  For an entire two minutes!  OMG, if only Melbourne’s trains ran like London.  A train every three minutes on every line.  We were on the Northern Line, so we had to get off at London Bridge station, a two-minute walk,  jump on the Jubilee Line and get off at Westminster.  So easy! 

PA243567
The streets of London

We wandered around Westminster a bit – had fun shooting the red double-decker buses as they went past, found a lovely garden to walk through, stopped off at New Scotland Yard and eventually made it to Westminster Abbey (nothing is a straight line when we have a camera in our hand)

PA243577
PA243590
Westminister Abbey

As was the story of our life on this trip, there were queues at Westminster Abbey. But not too bad.  We were inside within about 20 mins, picked up our audio guides, and wandered around.  Stunning building inside, but no photographs allowed. Which was disappointing, but I get it.  There were sooooooo many people inside it was hard to move and get around. Put a camera in their hand, and it would come to a standstill.  We were allowed to photograph the exterior, cloisters, and gardens, but inside the abbey, a big no-no.

PA243600
PA243617
London Eye

Leaving the Abbey, we headed back along the river and over the bridge to the London Eye.  The River Thames seems to be still a ‘working’ river with barges of goods as well as pleasure craft heading up and down it. Unlike the Yarra River around the docklands, where it’s just pleasure craft and working, vessels are kept to other areas.  It seemed very strange 😉

PA243644
PA243649

Security was very tight getting onto the eye (good lol), but we had a fast track entry and getting on didn’t take too long.  There are 32 pods on the eye – one for each borough of London, and a ride takes around 30 mins. Unfortunately, the best view – was shooting into the sun, so the light was challenging.

PA243659
Mad Hatter High Tea

By the time we were off the eye and had made our way through crowds of people, we were cutting it fine to get to our High Tea booking for 3:30 pm. So we found a London Cab and took that. The price was quite reasonable, I think, from memory, it cost us about £8 for the half-hour trip to the Sanderson Hotel.

London Cabs

High Tea was nothing short of amazing.  We started with delicious cocktails, followed by individual pots of tea, then our platter with savoury and sweet.  And no one had room for the scones with jam and cream… I know… criminal! 

Days End

After high tea,  we did a little bit of shopping in Oxford Street – then back to the station and back up the hill and up the two floors to our room… days total was 11.5 kms and 15 flights of stairs… that night’s dinner was very late and very light!

Heading back to Oxfords Circus station
A sea of people heading to Oxford Circus Station

Hidden Costs of Holidays

About 12 months ago, a group of us (all amateur photographers) signed on to do a 3-week trip covering Tromso, London, and Paris.  The price looked excellent – too good to pass up.  Add the lure of northern lights chasing, and we were all keen.  But the initial cost proved to be only the beginning. I found there are many hidden costs of planning holidays.

While the price was undeniably great, there were hidden costs. Costs that I didn’t consider as a first-time long-haul overseas trip at the time before I said yes.  Things you don’t think to factor in with the glow of excitement over an overseas trip to far-flung places. And no, I don’t mean travel insurance and spending money, which I had budgeted in. 

No Regrets (do it all)

Considering the vast distances we are travelling to get there, (35 hrs travelling time Australia to Tromso with three plane changes). Add in the likelihood that, most likely, we are never going back due to distance and cost. Therefore, we all wanted to get shots worthy of bringing home.  The last words I wanted on my lips at the end of the trip was “I wish”.  I wish I had bought a wide-angle lens. I wish I had the new filters I have been looking at. I wish I had a better/bigger/smaller bag; I wish I had better clothing for the cold; I wish I could have afforded to take that extra tour. I wish, I wish, I wish. You see where I am going.

Gear

As it’s a photographic trip, we have upgraded our camera gear.  Three of us have new cameras (two wholly changed over from Canon to Olympus. And yes, add all the new lenses that go with that.  All of us bought extra batteries to cope with the cold. Some have new filters,  others new camera bags, additional memory cards, lighter carbon fibre tripods, new smaller lighter laptops and externals to back up the images, and bigger camera bags to fit in snacks, water, and wet weather gear. The shopping went on and on and on and on.

Clothing

Also burning through the credit cards and savings was clothing.  It’s forecast to be between 1C – 5C in Tromso. So thermal underwear, snow boots, waterproof hikers and photography gloves were on the shopping list. We also bought photographers gloves, designed to keep the hands warm but engineered work the cameras were purchased. 

Add down coats, thermal hats, snow socks, and windproof, waterproof pants.  London and Paris will be a little warmer. We had two nights booked out northern lights chasing. Plus day trips out on arctic wildlife spotting and night trips elsewhere, the arctic gear was the first thing we ordered

Hot Hands and Toes

Hot Hands (little heat-activated pouches that give off heat for 8-10 hours) have been purchased and stockpiled over the winter months to take with us.  Sorry if you went to chemist’s warehouse and there was none left. But we needed them?  One hot hand in each pocket to keep batteries warm (they go flat quicker in the cold), plus one in each glove. Buy packing cubes to find things when I need them instead of going through my suitcase like police with a search warrant. Add a couple of small laundry bags and cubes!

Electronics

Travelling overseas, everyone realises you need special power adapters.  Travelling to Europe and the UK, we need one for each country. Add a powerboard to simultaneously charge camera batteries, watches, iPhones, iPods, and laptops. A power bank for charging phones on the go and recharging batteries quickly after being out shooting all day before going out again most of the night. Add a double camera battery charger.

Tours

Since we had some free days and followed on from the ‘no regrets’ mantra, we also planned to see and do as much as humanly possible while there.  Cram as much in, see as much as we can, photograph everything, sleep when we get home. So, we needed to fill our ‘free days’ with tours, right?

In Tromso, add an arctic wildlife experience and add another night of northern light chasing to maximise our time. Add tours in London to Cornwall, white cliffs of Dover, Cotswolds, Canterbury Cathedral, Westminster Cathedral,  Tower of London, Alice in Wonderland High Tea. in Paris, add a skip the line Eiffel tower to the summit and Mont St Michel.  Stay an extra few days, travel to Germany, and take the train rather than fly. It’s all about the experience, right? 

Add tours to the Castles and another to Salzburg, Austria. Oh, excellent, look, another $2k gone. Tetanus shot (doctor’s orders). Oyster cards, global sim, convert Aussie dollars to cash in three currencies, so we have some folding stuff on landing. Letter from the doctor for medications. New packets of said medications have to stay in their boxes and not be in pillboxes.

Forgotten Anything?

Ummmm, I don’t think I have, but despite that, we have more gear, backups, and planning than Roald Amundsen or Scott of the Antarctic. Despite covering every eventuality I can think of, I am confident when I get on the plane. I will remember something I should have bought or packed!

© Bevlea Ross