The first day of walking since returning, I strung three walks together from Waterloo. The first around Lambeth & Southbank was around an area I was already familiar with, but new sights for me were Lambeth Palace (the palace of the Archbishops of Canterbury) & Archbishop's Park.
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As Thursday last week turned out to be a stunner, I took the opportunity to venture a little further out of the city towards Highgate & Hampstead. Despite the cold, it was pretty easy to keep warm as this turned out to be one of the hilliest walks I've done around London. Starting out, it wasn't long before I was walking around Highgate Cemetery - I couldn't believe how sprawling & overgrown it was. The most famous resident here is Karl Marx.
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It's surprising how many times I've been asked in the last few weeks if I am working yet or looking for a job. Somewhere in amongst the walking & sightseeing, I've started to think about looking for one. That basically means that I got around to starting to update my CV, emailed some referees, made a Job Hunting folder on Firefox & filled it with useful sites & then got distracted. I'm in no rush as going away for four weeks in January/February is a whole block I am going to be unavailable. Having said that, I think those four weeks will be quite a drain on my remaining finances & returning to the UK I will have to begin the hunt in earnest.
Friday the eleventh saw me head in to check out the Covent Garden Christmas market - which was disappointing - & then to continue my intermittent gazing at art at the National Gallery. The gallery is quite manageable if you only try to do a little bit at a time - I think I would go mad if I tried to do it all at once. I'm now half way through the collection, but definitely enjoyed the works I saw on my first visit more. I managed to get out to Rayner's Lane to see the Patricks before it got dark (i.e. before half past four) - always great to catch up with Andrew, Shelley & the girls - even if I did get thoroughly confused trying to learn how to play Knights & Cities.
Over the last weekend the weather took a little bit of a turn for the colder. I was getting quite comfortable with high in the mid-high single digits; now I'm getting used to highs of zero to low-single digits. Still, so long as it's not windy or raining & one is well wrapped up the walking has been more than pleasant. On Monday's Islington & Clerkenwell walks I was particularly interested in the New River. It wasn't really a river at all, but for almost four hundred years this man made channel brought London's potable water supply from springs about thirty miles north in Hertfordshire. Now of course, it has been superseded by something a bit more modern &, being the geek that I am, was fascinated by details of the new ring main that is twice as far under London than the most of the Underground & is a little like the M25 - but it's for drinking water. Walking around Highbury Fields was quite nice too - it was here in 1666 after the Great Fire that one diarist saw "200000 people of all ranks and degrees dispersed and and lying along by their heapes of what they could save from the fire, deploring their losses, and though ready to perish for hunger and destitution, yet not asking one penny for relief". On a less sobering note, I also stumbled across Arsenal's rather large Emirates Stadium. Near the end of the Clerkenwell there was a flurry of interesting sights - the Smithfield Meat Market (on this site William Wallace was hung, drawn & quartered after being dragged behind a horse from the city; also more than two hundred were burned alive under Queen Mary's reign - charm the paint off walls, these guys [sorry, Jason Statham quote]), the oldest church in London - St Bartholomew-the-Great (coincidentally, St Bart's day is the same as my birthday) & where the St John's Ambulance was launched in 1877.
Before meeting (NZ) cousin Chris in the City on Tuesday it was another good chance to take advantage of the sun & string a few more walks together. These were a little bit closer to the West End - starting with the Notting Hill walk, I then continued on from Bayswater to Belgravia (through Knightsbridge) & finally Marylebone. There was of course a lot of interesting things for sale on Portobello Rd (even if it was only Tuesday); generally, Notting Hill was a lot of nice houses - although it was interesting to learn that there used to be a racecourse around the top of Notting Hill & the top of the hill was used as a natural grandstand - it didn't last too long as the jockeys refused to ride on it as the ground was so heavy as to be dangerous. I also found one of those delightful book shops near the Holland Park tube - the one where you want to leave with cases of books. From Bayswater it was through Kensington Park (lunch by the Round Pond was quite cold - I resolved to start wearing my Icebreaker leggings, jeans just weren't cutting it) to the museum district & Knightsbridge before trooping around the quite fancy area of Belgravia - a lot of embassies & consulates. Marylebone is just north of Oxford Street (I never really enjoy the crowds of shoppers here) & once was one of the closest villages to central London - it of course, has long since been swallowed up. This a very pleasant walk with lots of nice squares; the biggest find on this walk was the Wallace Collection - the art collection of several successive Marquises of Hertford. As I walked past, I resolved to return & see it - as it turns out after popping out from the cute shopping street of St Christopher's Place (nice lights) on to Oxford St, & scooting around Harley St I had plenty of time to pop in to the collection for an hour or so before heading off to meet Chris.
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Wednesday was a very domestic day with shopping & various errands - but made much more exciting by the first snow of the winter. It snowed for a good few hours, but was never enough to settle in more than a few small places. Consequently, I was well prepared for the possibility of snow on Thursday's walks - the forecast was favourable for the day. As I had an appointment a little west of the city, I took the opportunity to head out & explore around the Thames & Richmond & then Barnes to Putney & Fulham. The Richmond walk was quite a long one & there was alternating patches of (comparatively) brilliant sunshine & cloudy gloom.
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Barnes Bridge is passed during the last stage of the famous University Boat Race & as I made my way down to Putney Bridge (where the race starts) I was to see a lot of boat houses & boats. I was curious to find out what the flashing blue lights were there for as I approached Putney. It turned out that the fire brigade was attempting to winch a VW Golf out of the incoming Thames - some clown had parked a little to close to the edge. So that provided a bit of a distraction for a while - they eventually got it out, but I'm not certain if it was too damaged to be written off. The cabin may be a little wet, but the engine & electrics hardly got flooded (the alarm went off as the tow-rope was connected).
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Consequently, when I eventually got up this morning there was a good two inches of snow everywhere - quite exciting for someone who has spent most of their life living in a decidedly temperate climate. When I made it out to get some bread & post more of Trish's Christmas cards, it was quite pleasant (i.e. above freezing point, just) & these are a few of the photos I snapped around the neighbourhood.
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Another Great Read. Interesting to read about the places in London where I have not been; i.e., most of your entry!
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