Showing posts with label hampstead heath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hampstead heath. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2010

Winter wonderland

Hampstead Heath

This Saturday, we decided to make the most of current winter conditions (a rarity in London for the past hundred years or so despite last year’s blizzard) and headed to Hampstead Heath for a chilly romp. This seemed a safer bet than relying on a train to take us further afield when apparently the entire archipelago is buried in snow (quite possibly the wrong kind). On account of my iPhone camera being so cruddy I took only one photo, but you can see plenty more here. The plan was for Matthew, Kath, Steven, Jackie (in town on business) and I to meet at Hampstead tube at 11.30, wander around a bit, and then duck into the Wells tavern for a late lunch. We started at Kurt Geiger because Jackie’s stylish Prada boots just weren’t going to cut it off piste. Once Miss Fashion-Plate was appropriately kitted out, we all made our way to Parliament Hill which, being exposed, was rather cold. Then we hoofed it up to Kenwood House for a cup of tea before meandering down to the pub and back up to the Holly Bush to bolster our resolve for the journey home.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Why London doesn’t suck:


Originally uploaded by sf2london.

Reason 437: Steven & I tossed a frisbee around this Hampstead Heath field with our friend Chris yesterday.

Monday, July 25, 2005

Miscellany

Over the past couple of weeks I have been observing things other than CNN and BBC News...
Jack Morton Summer Party - June 30th:
Steven & Nicole (Jessica)
Decor
More decor
Steven & Martha (Fiona)
Random shots:
Rabbit (cousin Jane)
New Wedgwood
Olympic confetti
Pub madness
Regent's Canal house I
Regent's Canal house II
Chihuly at Kew Gardens
Hampstead Heath art I
Hampstead Heath art II
Hampstead Heath art III
Convertible Smart
Underground found art I
Underground found art II
They just know how...

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Not 9-11

On Saturday there were hardly any people at the Portobello Road Market. At first we thought this was because the city had been subdued by Thursday's terrorist attacks. It turns out that the more likely cause was that two of the tube lines serving Notting Hill Gate weren't operating, making it difficult for people to get there. After morning errands we took a bus to Turnham Green and then the part of the District Line that's still working to Kew. Steven hadn't been to Kew Gardens yet and as I predicted it shifted his perspective on London. We had a moment of homesickness in the redwood grove. Then we met Craig & Kath for dinner at a place in Fitzrovia, very close to Tavestock Square. After dinner we walked through Soho, Covent Garden and Mayfair, which were all very lively.

On Sunday Steven & I walked up through Notting Hill, North Kensington, Kensal Green and Kensal Rise to Queens Park (which had a very Park Slope-y feeling). We found the schmancy main drag of Salusbury Road and then headed over to Kilburn High Road, at the top of which we hopped on a train to Hampstead Heath. We had lunch in Hampstead and then wandered over to the bathing ponds, where Steven took a dip. Then we took the Northern Line back down to Soho to watch the throngs of people and have some dinner.

+ + +

On all the news programs you keep hearing, "Well, we had the IRA." And there are also Blitz references, as in "I was worried about my mum, who lives in the area. But when I tried to track her down, she was at her dance class. Well, she survived the Blitz -- I guess this isn't going to stop her." The only visible change in the city is that tube stations display revised maps with the Circle Line and parts of the Metropolitan, District, Piccadilly, and Hammersmith & City Lines greyed out. There's less grey with each passing day.

It felt like 9-11 changed the world. This just makes me think the change is permanent.