Showing posts with label United Kingdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Kingdom. Show all posts

Monday, September 19

Broadway Tower and Oxford

In the morning we headed out to find Broadway Tower.  There was ridiculous traffic on M5 and it took us four hours to go what was supposed to be two and a half hours.  Broadway Tower isn't a huge international tourist destination.  It's not a castle, it's a folly, meaning it was built specifically for decoration without function.



After taking lots of pictures from many different angles, we headed down to the town of Broadway, specifically for a great ice cream stand in town Andy read about.  The town was worth the trip (even without the tasty ice cream).  A small two lane road leads into town which is lined with stone buildings built at least a couple hundred years ago and well maintained.  There were two people manning a bicycle ice cream stand and we bought a cone of toffee and a cone of strawberries and cream and were not disappointed.  We wandered around the town while eating our ice cream then left for Oxford when we were done*.

Once in Oxford we had to find a place to stay having not found a hostel online beforehand.  Luckily, Central Backpackers had two beds in a 12 bed dorm. We wandered around Oxford, saw Christchurch college (the great hall from Harry Potter was filmed there, although it was closed for the night), the Radcliffe Camera, and other small landmarks around the town.


Radcliffe Camera


For dinner we ate at Kebab kid and had some decent food, a veggie naan wrap and fish and chips.  In the morning we headed out to London to drop off the car.  It ended up being more of a debacle than we had predicted it would be, but it all got sorted out after a couple hours or so.  We picked up our train tickets for the morning, saw Kings Cross Station and platform 9 and 3/4 and made microwave dinners in the hostel (no kitchen).



*Technically, we stopped back off at Broadway tower because the clouds had started to clear a bit and we wanted better pictures.

Friday, September 16

Starting up Fotodump Friday for Europe

Okay, we now have enough photos we haven't posted on our blog to continue with fotodump friday!  Hooray!

Katie:

These advertisements were all over Spain.  Americans are known to the world by the size of their food.


This awesome astronomy park in Valencia but we didn't figure out what this cage was for.


A building with damage from the Blitz.  Really cool bit of history.


This guy was at Carnival in London.


Outside of our hostel in Windemere, England.  Makes me think of fairies and hobbits and the such.


A lot of the public walking paths in England were through private farmland so the fences were to keep sheep and cows and horses in their pens.


Andy:

I think this was up near Mont Juic in Barcelona. La Sagrada de Familia in the distance.


Katie and Laura!


One of the many cool buildings at the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia.


Upgraded "do not enter" sign.


Parliament.


View from the terrace at the Windemere YHA.

Thursday, September 15

The Yorkshire Dales and the Peak District

After our morning hike in the Lake District we headed south towards the Yorkshire Dales. At this point I feel obligated to tell you that a lot of our tour of England was motivated by Harry Potter. Most, if not all of the Harry Potter films have been filmed in the UK and there was a particular scene in HP7 Part 1 where both Katie and I said "I want to go to there." After a bit of googling I found the town of Malham in the Yorkshire Dales. We knew ahead of time that Malham is pretty small, so we stopped for groceries in the town of Settle before arriving.


Once in Malham we hiked up the 400 steps to the top of the limestone formation and spent some time taking pictures, eating snacks and generally avoiding the other tourists. After making lunch back at a picnic table at the hostel we decided to drive down the road to Gorham Scar. Gorham Scar is a really beautiful glacial valley with a waterfall on the inside. In the evening we had tomato soup, couscous and a loaf of bread and then hung out in the hostel's common room talking about life in general with three Brits.



Hand pulled Ales


The next morning included yet another southerly journey and so we set off for the Peak District around 9:30 AM. Because a lot of this english journey was to parks and small towns the roads were not: fast, wide, well marked or generally navigable. After about three and half hours of driving and getting lost we finally made it to Castleton. The Brits from the night before had told us to do the hike from Castleton towards Edale, so we did (after making some peanut butter and banana sandwiches for lunch).



As we hiked up the hill towards Edale the clouds began to break and the scenery was beautiful. Back down the hill towards Castleton and into the car to drive Winner's Pass once more to film it and then on to the Bretton (another tiny town in the Peak District) hostel. As we drove along a small ridge in Bretton towards our hostel we saw what someone later guessed were the Red Arrows (eight jets) practicing aerobatics with red, white and blue smoke.

Our Hostel in Bretton

Wednesday, September 14

The Lake District

After renting our car, we headed to the Lake District.  Since starting our trip, any advice from British people on what to see in their country has included this national park.  On the way down we stopped at a tiny turn off the road with an incredible view of some farms and mountains and such and made ourselves peanut butter and banana sandwiches.

Our roadside lunch stop (still in Scotland)

Further down the road we stopped at a proper parking lot at the top of a mountain pass to view the surrounding valley.


Once in Windemere we starting looking for hostels.  Usually while traveling we will book our hostel online for the next night, saving the scramble of finding a place once in the town.  Unfortunately, we decided to not book our first night and just wing it.  Sometimes it sounds like the better idea, but it never is.  We arrived in town at 5:15 and the tourist center closed at 5.  There were also no internet cafes in town to look up hostels, and we had 2 addresses for 2 different hostels, but no map. We found one of the hostels but it was full for the night.  The other hostel was no where to be found.  Eventually Andy popped into a diner to ask where it was and they helpfully gave us directions.  It was 2 miles outside of town.

Once there, we booked a room (a private room was only a couple pounds more than a shared room so we went ahead and treated ourselves) and headed back into town to get groceries for dinner.  Back at the hostel we made "mexican" which consists of refried beans with added green pepper and onion, salsa, "guacamole" (whose second ingredient was peas), and tortillas.


In the morning we hiked from the hostel to a "public bridle path" which was a dirt road between stone fences and farmland.  We hiked for a couple miles before heading back to the hostel and taking off again.


Monday, September 12

The amazing city of Edinburgh

The day we arrived in Edinburgh, it was around 6:30 and all we really wanted to do was eat and relax.  But just walking from the bus station (we had flown from London to Glasgow, then took a bus over to Edinburgh) to our hostel was an amazing walk through this well preserved old european city.  It was exactly what I wish all old towns would look like.  There is a castle on a hill surrounded by small streets lined with classic old stone buildings.  We made tortellini and red sauce for dinner in our hostel, which had a perfect view of the castle on the hill.

The view from our hostel

The entrance to the castle

The next day we headed right up to the castle to get a closer view. Without paying the entrance fee, the castle was more impressive from the bottom of the hill.  I don't think it would have been any more impressive than the inside of the Tower of London, which is why we decided not to pay for it.  From there we walked down the Royal Mile, which is the street that starts from the castle and heads down the hill, full of cool old stone buildings and touristy shops.  For lunch we heated up the leftover tortellini then headed back out to conquer the other hill in town.


One of the amazing buildings around

It took us about an hour to get up the hill and had wonderful views of Edinburgh and the surrounding area although it was a bit windy and cold.  As we walked back into town we split a "milkshake" which we forget in foreign countries usually means milk + ice + chocolate.  Dinner was stir fried vegetables with a pre made sauce and couscous.



The next day we checked out and headed to Hertz to pick up our rental car.  Since we were early, we hung out at a little cafe down the road which had free wifi.  I ordered an espresso and Andy ordered a hot chocolate. Both drinks were very tasty. At noon we picked up our car and headed south.


To emphasize how cold it was outside

Friday, September 9

London touristy things

Our first full day in London was raining, so we spent the day in the free Science Museum. It was amazing.  There were tons of things to see there, not all were ancient (although some of the exhibits could use an update).  Our favorite exhibit was called Listening Post which is too difficult to explain.  Lunch and dinner consisted of a footlong sub sandwich each, eaten half at lunch time and half at dinner time, with a microwavable mac and cheese to supplement the dinner half (our hostel didn't have a full kitchen).




On our second day, we changed locations to our friend's Robin and Aaron's apartment.  They live in this really adorable three floor, two bedroom apartment in Notting Hill.  While they did domestic London things, Andy and I checked out Big Ben, the Parliament building, Westminster Abby, Red Lion pub for sandwiches and a pint of English ale (thanks Sarah and Andre!), Buckingham palace, and a stroll through Hyde Park.  For dinner we made Robin and Aaron black bean burgers in which we put in the usual amount of chili powder, but I think in London that meant cayenne pepper.  The burgers were very spicy.  They made us broccolini and sweet potato fries as sides.




And on our last day in London we went to the Tower of London.  I loved it.  It's a giant old castle in the middle of the city with outer walls and views of the famous bridge (which I thought was called London Bridge but is actually called Tower Bridge).  For lunch we headed out to Covent Garden to walk around and split a jacket potato (baked potato) with vegetable chili on top.  As we sat on the corner of a pavilion, Terri St. Clair (I think) played guitar and sang.  If you can find him on youtube, listen to a couple of his songs.  They were lovely.




In the afternoon back at Robin and Aaron's place, we watched the Notting Hill Festival, or Carnival.  It was not your typical parade, but mostly semi trucks with massive amps and a DJ pumping out reggae music driving slowly by as thousands of dancers trail behind them.  For dinner Robin and Aaron got us jerk chicken and rice and grilled corn on the cob from a Carnival street vendor.