Friday was our last day in London (sob, sniff). The Montezes went to the Tower and we went to the Tate Britain. We walked down Kensington Church Street and went into St. Mary Abbots before catching the Tube to Westminster from the High Street Kensington Station. We crossed Westminster Bridge and walked down the east side of the river to Lambeth Palace and Lambeth Bridge, putting us just a few steps from the Tate Britain. We walked back through Victoria Tower Gardens and past Parliament. The Jubilee Line took us to London Bridge Station, and nearby, at Southwark Cathedral, we met the Montezes for lunch at Borough Market. I had a brainstorm, and walked us around the corner to the Old Operating Theatre on St. Thomas Street behind London Bridge Station at the foot of the Shard. It seemed like a nice medical connection for Rob, and I think everyone enjoyed the too-short visit. We tubed back to the Italian Fountains in Kensington Gardens and made our way to Kensington Palace. The grocery stores on Queensway were calling to us, so we headed to Sainsbury's and purchased a huge load of treats to take home. We had supper at Zizzi again before taking an evening walk to Holland Park and the Kyoto Gardens there. The walk back up Holland Park Avenue and Bayswater Road was a lovely but bittersweet finish to the day and the trip.
The Churchill Arms on Kensington Church Street is
an Instagrammer's dream
Kensington Church Street with Kensignton Church in the rear
These guys have been selling flowers since we first went to
London in 1978
Kensington Church has a name: St. Mary Abbots is a
splendid example of Victorian Gothic Revival
Kiddos at the door
Anna's fine shot of Westminster Bridge and Westminster Palace
with Elizabeth Tower, usually called Big Ben
My wonderful fellow travelers
Headed to Lambeth, doin' the Lambeff walk, oi
Lambeth Palace, the London residence of the
Archbishop of Canterbury, is a fine Tudor building
This is where Anna learned to love art
Millais and Waterhouse are favorites
And I really like David Hockney
This Sargent called The Mountains of Moab, 1905, stunned us
because it looked like it could have been Moab, Utah
Headed back toward the Lambeth Bridge from the Tate
Headed back toward the Lambeth Bridge from the Tate
When you don't carry water, you hydrate where you can:
Victoria Tower Gardens
I love the Westminster Tube Station: like something
from Star Wars
Borough Market with The Shard looming large in the background
Lunch at Southwark Cathedral
Pie and mash with minty mushy peas were delicious
That's Rob in Southwark Cathedral
The Old Operating Theatre is accessed by way of the tower
of Wren's St. Thomas Church
The Herb Garret of Saint Thomas Church where
herbs were dried, is filled with medical memorabilia
1822 Victorian operating theatre at St. Thomas Hospital was
built in half of the Herb Garret of St. Thomas Church
Saint Thomas Church, associated with the hospital of the same
name, was built in the 17th Century by Christopher Wren
She was an Engergizer Bunny: cartwheeled hundreds of feet
to the Italian Fountains
The Italian Fountains at Kensington Gardens
The Long Water becomes The Serpentine in Hyde Park
The Peter Pan Statue: J.M. Barrie lived on Bayswater Road just
across from Kensington Gardens and they were the setting for
his first Peter Pan story
Regrouping with treats at the Round Pond; Kensington Palace
and Kensington Church in the distance
Royal clothing collection: 1950's Christian Dior for Princess Margaret
Modest English Baroque interiors at Kensington Palace were
to Queen Mary II's taste
Clara and Anna at the Kensington Palace Sunken Garden
Tucker's video of a portion of the treats being scanned at Sainsbury's
Headed along Moscow Road with treats in tow
Father, Daughter, and Treats at the BYU Centre
The Churchill Arms was busy on our way to Holland Park
Kyoto Gardens at Holland Park
Kyoto Gardens
Rob's photo of the evening walkers
Splendid hydrangeas at Holland park
Saturday morning, 9 July, we packed, cleaned up the flat, and headed to
Heathrow for our flight home. It all went very well: customs at JFK was
fantastic and we made our connection perfectly. Katy and Stephen picked
us up at SLC and the whirlwind tour of England and London was sadly just a warm
and wonderful memory.
Departing for home from the Notting Hill Gate Station
Provo on our approach to SLC
This trip was a dream. I am so glad the Hastings invited me and then twisted my arm and made me "pull the trigger" and buy tickets. I can't imagine why I was reticent. I genuinely enjoyed every moment (with the exception of the four disappointments detailed in the previous posts). Rob was a great driver and the kids were troopers. They never complained, were always excited (in a Hastings kind of way [Clara being the exuberant exception]), and never flagged. Thanks as well to Rob and Anna for several of the photos in these 13 posts. That's all for now.
OXO
D.

















































3 comments:
Sad it is over. So glad you came. It was WONDERFUL!. Loved every second. Can't wait for your October trip and to see what you do then.
What a fantastic trip.
Wonderful trip!
Post a Comment