So, Caty started looking at international dates and asked if I would go if she found tickets in a reasonable place. I was mildly interested in The Eras Tour and very interested in traveling somewhere fun with Caty, so I was in. Vancouver looked briefly promising (I even booked lodging), but that didn’t pan out. I put the kibosh on anything in South America. I just wasn’t comfortable with a huge event there. I am so glad I did because those concerts were plagued with deadly heat. Australia seemed like a good idea. But, no go.
Then, she snagged tickets (or so we hoped) for a concert in Cardiff, Wales. Cool! I had always wanted to go to Wales.
We had a plan that had us going to the concert and then continuing with a driving tour of Wales and England's Lake District based on Caty’s employers’ vacation plans. But they changed their plans (as they always do) and so we flipped the trip, leaving earlier and ending with the concert.
So, this is how it looked: Fly to London, arriving in the afternoon, pick up a car the next morning and drive north, exploring along the way, including the Cotswolds. Drive on to the Lake District and spend two days there. Then, swing over to Wales and spend five days exploring before arriving in Cardiff for one day of exploring and the concert. Then, take a train to London and fly home the next day.
Masterplan for our United Kingdon (UK) trip |
So, let’s go …
Getting There
We had booked three out of four of our original tickets using miles, so changing them to a new itinerary was a piece of cake. My return ticket had been paid for and I was not able to cancel for a refund, so now I have a pretty large credit with American Airlines that I need to use up within a year. No problem; I fly a lot.
But, our new itinerary was soooooo much better. Originally, we were flying to LAX and then to Heathrow, which meant flying directly over Denver to get where we were going. The new outbound was through DFW. And, our new return was less miles but business class. Whoo hooo!
On departure day, I drove up to Caty’s, picked her up and then drove back to Denver International Airport. When we were on the plane headed to DFW, we realized that our connection was much shorter than we had realized and, then, we landed a bit late.
Then, our gate was blocked, so we had to go to another terminal (farther from our connection).
By the time we pulled in, we were a bit harried and we sprinted to Skylink to get to Terminal D.
What we didn’t realize was that while we were in the air, we had received a text telling us our flight was canceled and then another text telling us we were rebooked on another flight just a bit later.
So, we made it to the gate in plenty of time to stand in an enormous line, re-check-in and then wait while something went on with the new flight that made departure questionable.
Finally, we boarded. We lost our carefully selected two-seat row near that back, but we made it to London only two hours late.
While I know that the fiscally responsible move would have been to take the Heathrow Express (about $50 per) into Paddington Station and then cab or Uber to our hotel in Bloomsbury, we were tired, so we took a cab. It was the afternoon rush, so it took forever and cost a small fortune (about $150.00). But, we made it. We stayed at the Royal National Hotel in Bloomsbury: serviceable but no charm and a loud crowd watching Rugby in the pub directly below us. But, by London standards, it wasn’t too expensive and it was walking distance to the two things we had planned for London: seeing The Book of Mormon in the West End and visiting the British Museum.
The first night we ate in the noisy pub, which was very good (I had a fish sandwich and chips and Caty had a meat pie ‘cuz ya gotta) and went to bed at a reasonable hour.
The British Museum
Outside the Museum |
We booked our hotel near the museum, but didn't think about making reservations (really? we should know better). So, when we finally thought about it, the earliest we could get was about 11:30 a.m. But, then we Googled more and discovered that reservations are encouraged, but not required. So, we decided to walk around in the morning (lots of pretty gardens) and check on the line before opening time.
Scenes from our walk |
The modern central court |
By the time we decided to eat lunch, it was packed. We were going to try the nice restaurant at the Museum, but it wasn’t open as early as the website had said and it was fully booked anyway.
So, we ate very yummy pre-made sandwiches (mediterranean veggie and caprese) at the downstairs self-service restaurant. It was lovely. When we left, the line to get in was around the block.
The British Museum says that its purpose is to "document the story of human culture from its beginnings to the present."
Egyptian art |
With 5 million visitors a year, it is the UK’s most popular attraction.
The museum was established in 1753 and first opened to the public in 1759. Over the next 250 years, as the British colonized the world, the museum grew and created branch institutions and independent spin-offs, the first being the Natural History Museum in 1881.
The British Library spun off in 1998.
From the late 1700s to the late 1800s, the museum acquired many of the world's most precious antiquities through donations, bequests and expeditions, often under less-than-honorable acquisition strategies.
Artifacts include sculptures from the Parthenon; the colossal bust of Ramesses II; remains of tombs of rulers of ancient Lycia; and the 4th century BC Mausoleum of Halikarnassos, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Ownership of some of its most known acquisitions, notably the Rosetta Stone, is subject to long-term dispute and repatriation claims.
In 1882, the museum was involved in the establishment of the independent Egypt Exploration Fund, the first British body to carry out research in Egypt.
So much to see |
Today, the original 1753 collection has grown to over 13 million objects at the British Museum, 70 million at the Natural History Museum and 150 million at the British Library. The Museum's online database has nearly 4.5 million individual object entries in 2 million records.
Our next adventure was to attend a play in the West End. We had previously seen some great shows there: My Fair Lady, The Sound of Music and Singing in the Rain.
This time we selected The Book of Mormon because we had heard that it was HI-LAR-IOUS. It wasn’t
Yes, it had some laugh-out-loud moments and the cast was talented. But, it was was surprisingly racist and far more raunchy than I expected.
I should have researched the show before booking. I didn’t realize it was written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, who created South Park! So, there.
The same night, there were plays starring Ian McKellen and Tom Holland that we probably would have enjoyed more.
Naked Bikers, a Black Dog and London
After the play, we decided to do the Taylor Swift thing and go to The Black Dog, subject of one of her songs on The Tortured Poets Department album. We Ubered over to the pub in Vauxhall and the driver warned us that traffic was crazy because of the World Naked Bike Ride.
Held every summer, the Ride has five objectives: protest global dependency on oil; curb car culture; promote real rights for cyclists; demonstrate the vulnerability of cyclists on city streets; and celebrate body freedom. According to Cycling UK, thousands participate (since there is no registration, exact numbers are impossible to obtain). We saw a couple of people riding, some more (full-on naked!) waiting to cross the street and several hundred in a park getting dressed after the ride.
Once we cleared that area, we arrived at our destination.The Black Dog is a lovely little neighborhood pub that seems to have lightly accepted the notoriety that comes from being featured in a Taylor Swift song.
Photo: Caty Stevens |
Black Dog fare |
Then, we walked across town back to our hotel. The skies had cleared from earlier rain and it was a truly pleasant stroll.
Trip date: June 6 - 20, 2024
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