Thursday, April 16, 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Easter Weekend
Easter is a huge holiday here, its equivalent in the states would probably be Christmas. The schools get two week vacations during Easter and most people travel or spend time together during Easter weekend (Good Friday and Easter Monday are both bank holidays so people don't have to work). Since everyone was gone this last weekend, the underground closed down some of the lines in order to do repair work. They worked on the lines 24 hours a day those four days while I attempted to figure out the bus system in Harrow. I was somewhat successful, but the tube seems a little bit more reliable (I waited entirely too long for a bus that never came). I was incredibly happy when the tube started running again on Tuesday.
Apart from tube delays and closures, the weekend was fun. On Friday my friends and I went to O'Neills a pub, it was really fun, we ran into some people from the semester group and hung out with them the rest of the night. Pubs are a great place to meet up with people and hang out, and at O'Neills there's dancing later in the night. Sunday, we decided to go to Thorpe amusement park (and just because it was Easter Sunday didn't mean that people weren't at the park). Like I said before, Easter is family time, so people went to the park to spend time with their families. The lines for the best rides were huge, but the majority of them were worth the wait, the best 1.4 minutes of your life :) One of the rides, Saw (based off the movies) had a wait of about 2 hours, then while in line, got shut down for repairs. After three hours of waiting, we finally got on the ride. It was nice though to get away from the city and culture for a day of of meaningless thrills.
A nice thing to do in the city, especially when the weather is nice, is going to a park. You get a momentary break from running around in the city and being around people all the time, plus the parks are really pretty. Yesterday after class I went to Kensington gardens with Darby and Becca. It was a nice day and the park was pretty, we just sat down by the pond and enjoyed being away from concrete and cars.
Between classes today, Becca and I went to Westminster Abbey and walked around inside. It was beautiful and just really neat to see. I was really excited for poets corner, it takes up the entire South end of the transept. There were commemorative plaques to all sorts of people, plus graves, likes Chaucer's. My English Lit/Art History soul was singing with pleasure. Tomorrow it'll be doing the same thing when the program goes to Oxford! I'm looking forward to tomorrow's excursion.
I'm still loving that classes take place in the city and museums. Art is so much more interesting when you're learning about it as you stand in front of it. And reading a work like Great Expectations is great when you actually recognize the places that Pip talks about. One of the characters in the book was educated at Harrow school which is just up the road from where I'm staying, I was really happy when I read that part. :)
Apart from tube delays and closures, the weekend was fun. On Friday my friends and I went to O'Neills a pub, it was really fun, we ran into some people from the semester group and hung out with them the rest of the night. Pubs are a great place to meet up with people and hang out, and at O'Neills there's dancing later in the night. Sunday, we decided to go to Thorpe amusement park (and just because it was Easter Sunday didn't mean that people weren't at the park). Like I said before, Easter is family time, so people went to the park to spend time with their families. The lines for the best rides were huge, but the majority of them were worth the wait, the best 1.4 minutes of your life :) One of the rides, Saw (based off the movies) had a wait of about 2 hours, then while in line, got shut down for repairs. After three hours of waiting, we finally got on the ride. It was nice though to get away from the city and culture for a day of of meaningless thrills.
A nice thing to do in the city, especially when the weather is nice, is going to a park. You get a momentary break from running around in the city and being around people all the time, plus the parks are really pretty. Yesterday after class I went to Kensington gardens with Darby and Becca. It was a nice day and the park was pretty, we just sat down by the pond and enjoyed being away from concrete and cars.
Between classes today, Becca and I went to Westminster Abbey and walked around inside. It was beautiful and just really neat to see. I was really excited for poets corner, it takes up the entire South end of the transept. There were commemorative plaques to all sorts of people, plus graves, likes Chaucer's. My English Lit/Art History soul was singing with pleasure. Tomorrow it'll be doing the same thing when the program goes to Oxford! I'm looking forward to tomorrow's excursion.
I'm still loving that classes take place in the city and museums. Art is so much more interesting when you're learning about it as you stand in front of it. And reading a work like Great Expectations is great when you actually recognize the places that Pip talks about. One of the characters in the book was educated at Harrow school which is just up the road from where I'm staying, I was really happy when I read that part. :)
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Falcons, Muffins, and Cupcakes
Something really interesting today- I got to see a falconer. He was up on the roof of the Courtauld Gallery and was using the falcon to catch pigeons around the building. And, something I discovered today, once comfortable with the tube system, stop taking the tube and walk instead. Many of the stops are really close together and when you walk around the streets you find a lot of really neat things. On accident I stumbled across Drury Lane (I didn't meet the muffin man though). Also, because I wasn't in the popular spots (or touristy areas) of the city, there were a lot of really cute and cheap shops. There was this one pastry/coffee shop that I ran across that had really cute and really tasty cupcakes.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
ICE & pics from Greenwich day trip last week
Greenwich

The Royal Observatory (where the Prime Meridian is)
It seems like everyday here is spent doing something. Martin said when we first arrived that we should never be bored because there is always something to go do or see, and he was right. Between the program, with excursions, classes, and plays, and then exploring London on what free time you have, there is barely time to sleep some days. The longer I'm here and in the program the more I enjoy it. The classes are fun and almost weekly we are able to go and see a play. This week we saw "Death and the King's Horseman" which was really interesting and good. Last night I was also able to see "Wicked" (not part of the program), but it was amazing, London has a lot of different plays and musicals playing all the time, and they're worth going to outside of class/program time.
Part of the program includes a class every few Wednesdays from Martin called ICE or inter cultural experience. We had our first ICE class today. Martin brought in each of the different London papers (the non free ones) and talked about the media in Britain including television and radio. Newspapers are much more important here, and more interesting (to me at least). Every morning on the tube, people have a newspaper. It's an important way to get information and news, more so than on the TV. I find myself picking up papers (the free ones usually, or ones left on the tube) when in the states I never read the paper. Regardless, the ICE classes are mostly going to focus on the cultural differences between Britain and the US (like the media and the importance of different mediums), and later in the quarter we are going to be able to go to Parliament. The program is really good about getting students to go and see things but also to experience more than just the typical tourist things and see things outside of what is taught in the classroom.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Kew Gardens
Today, we topped off a long week with a tour around Kew Gardens. Last night AHA, both the semester group and the quarter group, went to see/listen to the Apostles. It was the story of Jesus told through music using an orchestra, choir, and 6 soloists playing different parts (Jesus, Judas, Mary, etc.), and Martin was in the choir!! The program is really great for taking students out to do and see things.
Kew Gardens Peacock and someones little boy
Classes the past few days have been amazing. We get out of the class room and see different parts of London. For our British novel class we were able to go to the library and see original manuscripts of different works. I was able to see a copy of Ben Jonson's Volpone and I saw the Lindesfarne Gospel! The week ended though, with another group trip, this time to Kew Gardens (like I said before), it was a cold day for it though. It was still enjoyable to walk around in a natural place while still being in London. Inside the greenhouses were really amazing. Outside there wasn't much in bloom, so there wasn't a whole lot to look at for the casual observer, but the greenhouses had all sorts of flowers and plants, plus the houses themselves were astonishing. Three of the houses were from the Victorian era and were beautiful.
One of the Greenhouses
It's nice though that the weekend is tomorrow, it seems that all week we have been running around for classes and the program, and while it's all been fun and interesting it's also been very tiring.
The same greenhouse (taken from the tree top walk)
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
G20
Today was the beginning of the G20 meetings taking place here in London. I'm not very involved in politics, but it is interesting to be living in a London home while this meeting is going on. The news has been covering it for awhile, and it has been enlightening to hear about the economic hardships and what is being done to solve the problems from the POV of a different society. Obama is seen through very hopeful eyes, and even if he doesn't live up to expectations the general consensus seems to be that at least he's not Bush. The loss of jobs and everything that is being seen in the US is also happening here, although it is referred to as the Credit Crunch. I'm really glad to be here in London during this time and to be seeing what's happening in a different way than I would if I was back in the states.
Gargoyale at Westminster Abbey
Guard walking back to the palace, also some of the police outside of Buckingham Palace
Plaque from a really pretty little church I found while wandering around the city. It has been around since cica 1100 but restored in 1670 after the Great Fire.
I had the opportunity to go see Parliament, West Minster Abbey, and Buckingham Palace today, and I spent my afternoon in the area. When I first headed out, I had forgotten about the meetings and the protesters. However, while I was there I didn't see protesters but I did see a lot of police. There were armed guards blocking the entrance to Parliament and more guards and a blockade around the Palace. Standing on the edge of the blockade, I was able to see the Mexican president leave Buckingham palace. I also saw a very quick, undramatic changing of the guards (from a distance the guards somewhat resembled bobble-head toys to me, their heads look huge with their hats). There were (and probably still are) a lot of people in the area watching the palace hoping to catch a glimpse of more politicians. I wasn't able to see a lot of the sites that I wanted to though, but the great thing about the program is that I'll have more time another day to go and explore more.
One thing that I recommend, is that when you have time to kill, just walk around London with no real destination in mind (or be like me and Becca and try to figure out the bus system and get lost instead), you end up finding really neat places that you never would have seen otherwise, and you begin to get more comfortable with the city and finding your way around. Besides, there is always an underground station nearby and as long as you know where you need to go you can find your way back!
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