Sunday, November 25, 2007

Go Go Go Go Go!

That was the tone of for our last day. We had a lot of stuff we wanted to accomplish today and not enough day to do it. We got up *very* early for us, got ready, stopped at Starbucks and hopped a bus to St. Pauls. Bussing it up was a different experience as the people were older and more beaten down but you got to see the City in all its glory which was a bonus. We got to St. Paul's at about 9:30 and found that the first tour didn't start until 11 a.m. so we decided on an audio tour. All of the big tourist spots have these headphones with maps that you can rent to tell you about stuff (Blaine called them audio tour zombies) and wander around. St. Paul's also didn't allow photos, but...this time we were both sneaky. :) It might not be the best image but it's still pretty darn cool. We followed the prompts and learned cool facts like the fact that Christopher Wren was determined to do things his way so screwed with his contract to get the look we wanted for the church (it was supposed to have a steeple and a teeny little dome). We wandered all over the first floor and then, Blaine, in a moment of evil genius I thought church vibes would kill, said "let's go up to the Whispering Gallery". Now that gallery is 259 steps up and is at the base of the dome of the ceiling. I thought it'd be cool but 259 steps is kinda a long way. He convinced me that all of our London walking had trained us for this and that it'd be easy and that the BIG SIGNS saying you can't turn back and you have to finish if you start and pregnant people, people with heart problems, etc are not allowed to do this. It SUCKED. 259 doesn't sound like a lot of steps but they were fairly straight up with a lot of close spiral staircases and the occasional hallways were so small that when Blaine would get to the top after I did he blocked all light and made them DARK little cramped hallways. We got to the top and while I'm still not completely convinced it was worth it the view from up there was completely cool and wonderful.

Blaine made the further trek to the top of the dome and then again to the tip top where you can see outside. When he got back and we trotted down the steps to the crypt and saw the final resting place of Wellington and Nelson.

Then on to Hamley's, the world's largest toy store (according to their adverts) where there was truth in advertising. It was huge and had a great range of toys and the staff were out doing demonstrations on every floor and even had a good product knowledge range. We found some of the things we'd been looking for and then headed back to drop of our bags. We then went to a Pakistani dinner where finally FINALLY I got gulab jum - neither of the Indian restaurants we went to had it and I love this dessert. After that I realized that I still hadn't finished souvenir shopping (I have a lot of family) so raced over to Piccadilly Square to finish shopping, then out to Platform 9-3/4 to see the Harry Potter monument and then over to Trafalgar Square to get pictures with the famous Lions (which the protest blocked) and then back to the hotel to pack up and have everything ready for getting up at the crack of dawn Saturday for the trip back.

Birds Eye View of Shopping Mecca

After Blaine requested to not do two "churchy" things in a row (I think he was afraid of the brainwashing) we decided to hit the London Eye, the coolest Ferris Wheel ever and Harrods, aka shopping Mecca. We started by hopping the Tube over to the Eye in order to buy advance tickets. As ya'll probably remember when we tried doing this before there was a multi-hour wait, however, they ticket lady said it would be 10 minutes. Doing it on a Thursday morning meant we walked right on - 10 minutes was even too long an estimate. Getting on and off of was interesting - The Eye does NOT stop (unless accomodating the physically handicapped) and you just hop on and off. This attraction was cool to me because it had the most Brits on it - it's apparently still a cool thing to do local or not.
The capsule you ride in is a clear oval bubble so that you can have a 360 degree view all the way around (brought to you by the Detp of Redundancy Dept) and it was fantastic. We took all sorts of great pictures and saw a lot and just loved it. It lasts about a half hour and it doesn't feel like you've been on there for that long. You can see one of the really good views of the city we got with a shot of Parliament and Big Ben in it. We got off the eye and headed to Harrods. Ah, Harrods, the world's largest department store and a VERY cool place. Blaine loved the food hall and said (and I quote directly lest you think I exaggerate) "I could shop in the food halls all day". If you think it, they have it and if they don't display it they can get it. They have tons of restaurants, pubs, and bars and that includes a KRISPY KREME. They have a working Krispy Kreme bakery in there - it was kinda off-putting to see in there actually. We ate a tapas bar in the basement and then hit juuuuust about every floor (we skipped the sports floor) and looked and shopped and bought and lugged and I had a pretty darn good time and at least for the food part Blaine did too. He was a real trooper for the whole thing though. After that we went home and crashed for a little bit to try and regain feelings in our feet and then headed out to a Thai place recommended by the hotel staff. The food was good and it was fun to try. They even bring out hot towels to wash off with at the end of the meal. It was a nice meal that we finished off with a trip to "our" pub - I've included that picture too. Blaine enjoyed being able to drink what he wanted and then be home in less than 3 minutes. There truly are pubs, bars, and alcohol everywhere. Last day and it's gonna be jam packed.

Friday, November 23, 2007

flickr photo upload, take two

I swear I'll catch up on the postings some time soon but, in the meantime, please go back to the flickr account and look at our newest additions. (You can use the web address listed in the previous post). Thanks, have fun and we're now on our way home. :( London rocks and I'm sad to leave it although going home to my stuff sounds really good. Later gators!

Fuzzy hats and lots of walking

So Wednesday was one of the listed days to do the super-ceremonial and quintessentially British Changing of the Guard. All of the guide books say get there early to score a primo spot so we jetted out of here and took off. There was a slight misunderstanding as to where this fancy pants spectacle took place but getting off of the Tube an exit early turned out to be a blessing b/c we had a gorgeous (and fairly quick) walk down the side of St. James Park. One of the things that London does have is an abundance of trees, parks, and the like most likely left over from the village green mentality (I'd take credit for that psychobabble but a sign/tour guide/Brit person said that some time this week). This beautiful walk took us through hugely elaborate Australia gates to the Palace.

The Queen, unfortunately, was not in to say "Yo!" to all of us tourists. :( The Palace is big, but compared to a lot of the buildings I've been to and seen it's not that big and not that ornate either. We got a decent spot by the front fence next to some nice people from Michigan that helped push away the VERY rude French lady (seriously the French - evil) from my obviously staked spot. We got there early, took pictures, hung out, waited, got bored, waited some more and FINALLY we heard the music - it was starting!

The little band of interior guards started marching around in some complicated dance sequence and then the band marched up in full fur hats and instruments behind the little band of "new" exterior guards. Then, another band and more guards marched up and then every possible combination of walking around and back forth between the commanders of these groups took place including and formulaic inspection of the guardhouse. The guardhouse is this teeny tiny 3 foot square box with a roof - what's to inspect? But it was cool to watch (for a while) and then, they broke into show tunes and kept walking around. It's now about 12:15 or so and they've been walking (again, just the commander-y people) for EVER and I was done. We left early but I don't think I missed much. So - while it was cool it's way too long so go early, watch for a while and then head up St. James Park to possibly the coolest attraction - Westminster Abbey.

Now, this place already had some favouritism points going for it (my parents met right outside the Abbey) but going inside and taking the tour put it up close/at the top. We got there right as an afternoon service was starting so all the tourists were not allowed in to tour until a little bit later so I got some nice outdoor shots and even one of me AND Blaine at the same time not at arm's length. (I asked a nice tourist guy to help us out ; he had a nicer camera than mine so no stealing - I hoped.) We got in, paid a fee (for a church??) and looked around at this gorgeous building with tons of monuments and marble etc and decided a tour was necessary - we'd never figure out all the cool stuff without a lot more time or a local. The tour - so worth it. We got to go to a chapel on the 2nd floor with a saint's tomb still in it that has been around since the 1600s (how cool is that!) and saw dead kings (3 or 4 of them) and dead queends (5 or 6 of them) and walked on graves (seriously - buried in the church floor - freaky weird to me) and heard all sorts of stories and history and cool little tidbits. For example, if a necromancer really wanted to screw with London he should just go to Westminster Abbey and raise the 3000 people buried in that place. Zombies would ABOUND! It certainly explained all the London based zombie movies to me. We finished our tour with our verger (he tried to say that Wesminster was the oldest religious site - ha! the Vatican (or St. Peter's Basilica has been around since the 400's - Vatican wins and Catholics rule!! (although the Basilica there now was built in 1506). It still rocked is cool and a must see in London - after that we ate pizza (I know, we're in London and eating pizza but it was good London pizza) and collapsed back at the CopperDay ranch (i.e. the hotel) for some rest. Thursday brings on The London Eye and Harrods a.k.a. shopping Mecca.
PS - the fee at the Abbey was for upkeep. They're considered a royal Peculiar, their official title, as such receive no money from a Church, the State, or the Crown. It's all donations and fees.

Editor's comment: No non-Catholics were harmed in the Catholics rule portion of this blog. However, there has been some Catholic mockage. ;)

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

British Museum

With all love and respect to the tee-total-riffic Smithsonian - it's a wannabe poser. I'll still love it, but not as much now that I've seen the truth. Tuesday, Blaine and I went to the museum that the Smithsonian wants to be when it grows up: the British Museum. The museum itself is free, huge, and overwhelming and that's before you add in the special exhibits like the Terracotta Chinese guys. We planned a whole day there (even though Blaine suggested adding in various London items - it didn't happen) and followed the plan. It was only when we got to town that we discovered that their "big" special exhibit was items from the burial "mound" (HA! just a mound!) of the First Emperor.

However, they limit ticket sales and the first available time for us was 3:20 p.m. which became a non-issue on the whole day there plan. We saw mummies and the Saxon Hoo treasure and the Elgin marbles (thief or saviour - you be the judge) and the Enlightment stuff and all sorts of rugs, textiles, jewelry, stuff and even Harry Potter coins in the money room. We hit cool things meltdown about 2:30 and were tired of the Eygptians and mummies and things that make you hmmm or awe. That gave us time to grab museum lunch (Brie for lunch in a museum cafeteria - cool!) before we hit the Terracotta dudes.

Blaine is the one that really wanted to see this event and I'm glad he did - it's was incredible and worth the price of admission. (Oh yeah, some special exhibits are for pay at EVERY "free" musuem) What a 13 year old accomplished is insane - JUST his burial mound inlcluded hundreds of figures including an army, in formation, of terracotta guys, some even still having their original paint and individual faces. And the First Emperor forced his guys to invent crossbow and chariot interchangeable parts CENTURIES before Eli Whitney pretended to be the first to apply it. So there!! Unfortunately, this particular exhibit was a no photo zone (grrrr!) and the sneaky phone camera guy's image (that's Blaine's no photo nick) is too blurry to post.

Get thee to the British Museum! I'll leave you with my favorite Blaine photo from the British Museum - I bet you guys will like it too (for those that haven't been to the flickr acct - it's posted there too).

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

flickr photo mega-upload


big ben
Originally uploaded by copperdays
We've pushed some pictures up to flickr, finally. Hope you guys enjoy!

Tower of London

It rocked. It was so cool. It was so worth the worse-than-Kentucky schizophrenic weather. I know we all joke if you don't like the weather wait five minutes but in London, at least on Monday, it was completely true. We were waiting on a Tower tour and from 11:18 to 11:25 (the tour start) it was sunny with blue skies, downpouring, drizzling, sunny AND raining, and completely overcast but no rain. The tour itself was super-cool - the Yeoman Warders (beef-eater guys) seem to be hand-picked to have a great sense of showmanship and humor which added to the subject matter made for an awesome tour. They showed us where Anne Boleyn (and 2 other queens) were executed; they talked about the famous prisoners and they went over burial locations of the Crown's "evil bad guys". A weird thing to me: they bury people IN the churches here - the tower, St. Paul's and Westminster Abbey all have lots of people buried beneath the floor, in crypts, or just laying about in the church proper. When they had to re-do the chapel in the Tower they found hundreds of corpses buried in there under the floor and altar - seriously (the three queens got to be the special altar people). We saw the Crown Jewels and the Armouries and actual official guards that patrolled the building with the Crown Jewels and the building with the keys to the Tower. It was fantastic. It was a little pricey, but worth every penny and even a few more. It fascinated me to hear little tidbits like the Tower has been open for tours since the 1700s. It's been a tourist spot for longer than our country has existed!

When we finished up, including visiting about 17 of the gift shops on the grounds, we leisurely strolled toward our pre-picked lunch location; slowly but surely we're working through timing and best meal values etc. Here's a cute pic of us with Tower Bridge (see Kris we really ARE in London!) Concerning food - we have been using the Zagat's book for restaurant recommendations and while the places they recommend are good the food is PRICEY (although lunches are pretty decent when price-fixed). After re-fueling we headed to St. Paul's - we got there after the tours finished so we got some exterior shots, and got to hear some of the Evensong which was also pretty cool. Dinner was a "curry house" right up the road where you have to PAY EXTRA FOR RICE. It's the teeny differences that kinda shock me. Why would they think Korma would be good without rice?? On to Day 4 and the British Museum!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

the WORLD closes early on Sundays

I base this statement on the fact that it was hard to find something to do today. Some of the always open options, like the Tower, were SUPER crowded but we were determined to do London things. We woke up a little early, and decided to museum it up today. Not the big, bad British Museum, but a couple of the other bajillion famous places around here. We went to the National Gallery, right across from Trafalgar Square, one of the must-hits on my list. Trafalgar Square was the location of a biiiig Turkey demonstration today - no real option of just Rita/Blaine with the lions especially when the Americans stink signs showed up in various places.


(This is from the porch, if such a Kentucky word can work here from the National Gallery).

After the gallery we hoofed to the Albert Victoria museum of weird stuff that could be art and could be crap. The last part is my personal add-on. Some parts were completely oh, let's say not my particular taste (seriously, one woman's art was to cover a screw with precious metal and put it in a wall) some were really very interesting (the rug from Turkey was COOL) and some were just awe-inspiring; like the plaster casts of famous cool stuff.
This is Trajan's column from Rome; full-size and copied in the early 1800's - this whole room was plaster casts of stuff from everywhere that are cool and the plaster casts are older than most of the stuff in our neck of the woods. It was by far our favorite room. After that we headed out to Indian food (another must do) and then to our neighborhood pub for a pint and a wind-down. We've adjusted to London time and we're getting ready for bed so we can do the Tower of London and St. Paul's Cathedral tomorrow. It's odd; in a restaurant or museum it's easy to think that you could be in any urban area but step outside the doors and POOF - London. I'll be interested to see what happens tomorrow at some quintessential London hotspots. So good night, so long, and until tomorrow gentle readers!

CopperDays and the 5 Dwarfs

While it was an admirable goal to try and do something cool on our first day - it kinda didn't end up happening. We left our hotel yesterday afternoon with the intent of going to the London Eye to get a lay of the land, look at something that doesn't require a lot of concentration and accomplish a cool London thing on our first day. Wellllll - we successfully and fairly easily Tubed it up and got over to the Jubilee Gardens and London Eye but that was about it. At that time the dwarfs accompanying our journery were Sneezy (Blaine is pretending he's not sick), Happy (LONDON BABY!), and Sleepy. We got lost, walked in a couple of circles, found Dopey on the way, and finally found this GINORMOUS Ferris Wheel with pods that give great London views.

Yeah! We're so excited; we're so willing, we're so ready we're so...not going on that thing. The line was approximately 4 hours long. I've read that Brits see a queue and join it but I had never seen it in action. At that point we pulled out a map and using Dopey's advice decided to walk to the Millenium bridge (which is about 3 - 5 miles away; Dopey can't read maps). It started raining on the walk and while we found this super cool book fair (CHEAP books and cool titles; a little piece of Heaven) we got hungry, found Grumpy, re-read the map to find out we were REALLY far away and went looking for dinner and home. We got fish and chips at the Fishcoteque (seriously) which were good and came back. We rested for a bit and then went out on the night version of our own Tower Bridge tour that Darren's already posted about. :)

More testing (but more pictures!)


So maybe I'll try a more interesting image here. Here is Tower Bridge. We walked over it Saturday night, in a successful attempt to stave off a jetlagged-induced early bedtime of 6pm.

It was a great move. The night was a bit drizzly and cold but the bridge was beautiful. We had a few pints and dessert at a Wetherspoon pub we found on the other side of the river. Sleep was postponed until the much more decent hour of 22:00 GMT.


Tomorrow we're actually going to visit the Tower Bridge museuem, the Tower of London, and St. Paul's Cathedral.

testing out image uploads


image88
Originally uploaded by copperdays
So Rita will follow up with a real blog post with better stories, etc, and I may do that as well. Right now I'm just trying out various ways to upload pictures to the blog.

This is not a very amazing picture. I was just amused to see Budweiser in the world beers section. Plus I'd had a few other beers (and recently at that) when I found this amusing. So there! Drink enough to be amused and hold on for better stories and pictures!

Saturday, November 17, 2007

We're Here

and we're completely exhausted. I *sort of* got crap sleep on the plane while Blaine got 1 teeny tiny catnap and is currently running on adrenaline and insanity (seriously he only got like 20 minutes). However, in an effort to try and get on London time if we nap it will be very short. I also have to say that while flying in to Gatwick was way cheaper and we'd probably do it again - it is VERY far away. Our flight got in at 9:30 GMT, we got to the hotel, with no dwadling, at noon. But we're here, we're clean and we're about to head out and brave the big bad city. wooo. London. (too tired to use exclamation marks but still SUPER excited)

Friday, November 16, 2007

So long for now!

Well the time is at hand. I'm shutting down the old laptop and getting ready to pack it up for London. It's time to go and I'm completely over-excited and a little tired and a little overwhelmed and pretty darn prepared. Try not to miss us too much and the next post will be from London!!

Thursday, November 15, 2007

A better kind of Gates

Blaine, henceforth to be known as Mr. Obsessively Detail Oriented, had posted a link to the Delta concourses (I suppose to plot the most expeditious route to the gate possible). I looked at it and saw clearly posted "International gates". I'm going to an international gate!! I'm going international!! With all (or most) of the work drama behind me I can completely focus on going to England. Yeah!

In less than 24 hours I'll be hopping across the pond. Woohoo!!

**Editor's Note: This blogger has been infected by mad marketing crackpots which leads to an excessive sprinkling of exclamation marks. Hopefully time in the Old Blighty will fix this annoying predilection. **

Also, you'll note that the blog has gone completely CopperDay - Blaine and I will both be popping on and posting so it's a 2 for 1 deal.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Almost time

It's almost time! Except for bathroom supplies and a box we're throwing odds and ends into, we've done very little packing. However, I've almost got every bit of laundry done and we'll have a whole wardrobe to choose from tomorrow evening.

Monday, November 12, 2007

My other favorite part of London

I know - we're not there yet but I figure it's still okay to have favorite parts of the London gig. So far, besides my soon-to-be cell phone free existence, I'm loving the pre-London trip shopping. London OBVIOUSLY requires all sorts of cool London-y things like new shoes, coats, clothes and a new purse as well as more practical items like fun little travel toothpaste and Tide sink-washing packets.

(These packets, by the way are the coolest thing ever. The mega-mart of doom (Wally-world) sells little packages that are designed to wash clothes right in the sink. How practical! How fun! How completely useless in the non-London "real" world!)

All of the shopping and prep and pre-packing planning (truly there are lists of lists of things to potentially pack) make this last week more exciting and add little bits of we're really going-ness to the whole escapade. Even though we're leaving in less than a week it doesn't always feel real. For me London is like that fantasy vacation you always play-plan but never actually take except, well - we're actually going. I guess I'll have to wait for the interminable airplane ride to really be on vacation.

Wanna know the best part of London? No cell phone coverage. I am going to be in another country and my phones will NOT work. I will NOT be accessible for work whiners, need-it-nowers, or lazy slackers that usually call and ask me for stuff as opposed to taking 5 minutes and looking it up. I'm not sure how they'll be able to handle it but - who cares? I'll be in London baby!

Truthfully, while the idea of a cell-phone-less life is SOOOO appealing now as Operation Crazy (aka the Christmas sales) has started up, I'm not sure I'll how I'll deal without my 5 th appendage. I might have to glue my cell phone to my head and pretend I'm getting calls so that I'll be able to remain in my comfort zone, my muscle memory doesn't get all screwed up, and the permanent crick in my left shoulder doesn't go away because of our vacation trip sans cell phones.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

hello world

Long time reader, first time blogger. There will be more to come. :)