Adventures in Greenwich

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Our next-door neighbors Susan & Gene

Boarding the Viking Jupiter was smooth and organized.  What a difference from other cruise lines! So many things are different (a good thing).

Today is Monday, so it must be Greenwich. The weather has been comfortable and every tour guide and Londoner have told us that we should feel very blessed.  We do.

We booked 2 tours today – a morning overview and an afternoon of learning about the Tower of London.

My knees trembled at the word Tower, but luckily there were only a few steps we didn’t have to climb much.  Our knees and calves still being quite sore from the Paris excursion.

In Front Of Royal Naval Academy

Greenwich is a snapshot of English history and home to several maritime institutions. Royal Naval College is a major symbol of Britain’s seafaring heritage and the architectural centerpiece of the city. (sounds like a brochure because I copied one.)

Greenwich is also the home of the “Cutty Sark”, built in 1869 and is one of the last tea clippers and part of the British National Historic Fleet.  Our tour guide, Mark, told us all about the myths and history that went along with ‘tea clipper’. I wish I could remember them all.  When your guide is a local and says, “don’t tell who told you that”, you have a fun guide.  We got lucky twice with guides in Greenwich.

Our guide, Steven, for the Tower of London, was quite a hoot. First of all, we were taught about the name Stephen – Britians use the ‘ph’ to spell it and Americans use the ‘v’.  Unless you have progressive parents, like Steven did, and made up their own rules.

The Tower of London is a multi-purpose tower.  It was used for:  Securing the Queen’s Jewells, the Royal Palace, and the Prison.

 

Ignore the people in the above photos – I was too impatient to wait for them to get out of my way.

We were not allowed to photograph the Crown Jewell’s.  Steven told us to get over it and copy them from the Internet like everyone else.

Alrighty then…

 

Adventures in London & Paris

Our trip began at the Phoenix airport International wing. It was a plethron of intertwining languages.  None of them English.

We were offered upgrades to the Business Class section (for a price). The soft cozy blanket was well worth it.  I wanted to take it with me so badly. I should have asked for it because I did not steal it and now I do not have it.  Oh, well.

Our adventure began with 2 nights in London, at the Conrad London St. James Hotel. It was a miracle we managed to get from the airport to the hotel.  The left-hand side driving is not the most unique traffic issue they have in the UK. The streets are a bit narrow, the intersections are either not laid out or so laid out that you cannot tell which way, side, or lane you need.  That, and they all drive 90 mph in places that Americans would drive 25-30 mph.  Bay Area traffic is nothing in comparison.

Our shuttle driver deserves either a medal or a straight jacket.

After we checked in, we explored around Westminster and Victoria Street. I wanted to have my photo taken in a London phonebooth. I only lasted in there 15 seconds. It reeked in there, It was obvious that the booth was used for other things besides phone calls.

Conrad is a 5-star hotel and I recommend it. I took pictures of some of the cool things about our room:

  • Big Screen TV -it doubled as a mirror when turned off.

Huge bathroom -With Shower & a tub!

 

 

 

 

We had a late dinner at the hotel and went to bed. The next morning at 4:00am we caught a shuttle to the train station for Paris.  I was so excited. Our tour would take us to the Eiffel Tower, The Louvre, and a boat down the river Seine.  All in one day, which is all we had since our ship was boarding the next day.

The train to Paris was fun, the weather gloomy. Our guide, the lovely Celeste, was fun and full of energy. Our all-day tour began at the Eiffel Tower.  We took a shuttle up to the 2nd observation floor.  The view of Paris was amazing – I had no idea how large Paris and it’s surrounding suburbs were.

Then, I got it in my head that I wanted to walk down to the ground level instead of riding the shuttle car.  The fact that the other three decided to walk with me, helped my self-confidence.

It was so cool! We were walking down inside the intricate framework.  I tried to take lots of photos, but they did not look nearly as cool as it did in person.  Halfway down from the observation floor, we realized we were in deep doo-doo. Our knees were starting to ache, then they began to tingle like they were going numb. Several times my sis-in-law and I had to stop walking and let the tremors subside before we went on. As we went on, each flight increased the agony that our knees experienced.  By the time we reached ground level, we were, for all intents and purposes, crippled.

Oh, Come on!  Crippled?

Yes.  We climbed down 674 metal steps.

Our next stop on the Paris-in-a-day-tour was The Louvre. The largest museum in Europe. To sis’s and my dismay, this monstrosity had stairs and vast hallways that led to even more stairs.  Upstairs was not so bad, but the going back down was nightmarish.

The Mona Lisa was moved up to the top floor because of the restoration going on in the museum. Sis and I were totally thrilled about that, as you can understand. Being there inside the Louvre was incredible. Of course, we had to see The Mona Lisa, we were there.

I’m happy to report that we saw Mona, barely. She had a huge security detail and photo Nazis that hurried folks past the painting after one photograph. So… this is the picture I got of her.  Not very impressive at all.

Happily, there was a reproduction hung in the hallway by the Mona Lisa room.  This Mona took much better photos and there were no annoying security guards to hurry you along.

I wonder what Leonardo de Vinchi would say about all this craziness…

 

♥  TTFN  ♥