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STILL IN EUROPE!!!!

London, United Kingdom


Dear friends,
You will not be able to believe this, We are still in Europe!! Not Japan at all! This is a long history wich I have to tell you about as soon as come back at home. Horrible!! I am still in London, Carlos still in Barcelona.
But finally he called me this morning saying that tomorrow, for sure, he will arrive to London; hopefully we will get our flight to Japan around 13hrs (time in Barcelona).
Do not worrie anymore for me, I will be ok, I am sure.
I am relaxing in this city (unfurtenatelly I am not doing shopping at all)What a shame!
I promise as soon as I get an oportunity will send you a postcard, oki?
Do not forget me!

Kisses y Huges from London.

Noemi

permalink written by  Noemi y Carlos on May 22, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: NUESTRO VIAJE POR ASIA Y ALGO MAS...
tagged London

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Wicked is absolutely WICKED!!!

London, United Kingdom


i watched a musical in london for d 1st time... it was really really tough to choose which to watch! i finally decided on 'Wicked'. it tells d story of how d wicked witch of d west (in Wizard of Oz) became d wicked witch. it was great! d set, d actors, d singing, d music, d story, d pace, d humor... absolute entertainment!! there was a standing ovation at d end of d performance too! absolutely wicked performance n i totally love it!!!! i have no other words to describe it! if this ever goes to singapore, i will watch it again!!! and again and AGAIN!!!

permalink written by  wangyng on June 21, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: Hello Europe!!
tagged London and UK

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Where are all the fireworks?

London, United Kingdom


Its My first fourth of july outside the us. Just like any other day over here.
Been keeping busy and practicing as much as I can stand. I've also just finished my first week of
classes at Drumtech. So far things have gone fine, despite a few flubs on my part.
It can only go up from here though.
Looking foreward to getting on with it.

Cheers

permalink written by  alexkoshak on July 4, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: Three months in London
tagged London, Alex and Drumtech

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EN CASA

London, United Kingdom


Hola gente!

Londres una vez mas!
Pues nada, hoy hemos llegado a casita, despues de tres meses se hace durillo, pero no sera tanto; volvemos al ataque el Carlitos y yo el proximo sabado, nos vamos a Argentina, Uruguay y Chile, al final yo me quedare en Mexico. Ya os contaremos que tal va todo por estos lares.

Un besote

Noemi

permalink written by  Noemi y Carlos on August 18, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: NUESTRO VIAJE POR ASIA Y ALGO MAS...
tagged London

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DE VUELTA AL PASADO

London, United Kingdom


Hello everybody,

Hopefully everything is ok for you.
I have been in London just for 3 days, tomorrow I will be back to Barcelona.
I have been walking around Soho, Picadilly, Covent Garde, Hide Park, etc...
I have had my special Fish & chips and my lovely beer: Strongbow (spelling is someting like that)
Last nigt my bestfriend Yarledy and I have been enjoying a nice dinner at "Mestizo" a real mexican restaurant, with real mexican as waitress and chefs, barmans, etc...
I could recomend it plenty!
Today I have been walking alone, around Hide Park, Baswater road and finally I have had a dinner at my favorite restaurant in Notting Hill Gate: ASK. Where "bruschettes" are so lovely and real italian and pasta is so fresh.
Everything has been alright, but, I miss so much Barcelona, people, my family, my friends and The sun!!!
I will fly back tomorrow at 11.30 in the morning...
So, I will see you soon over there!!!

Big kisses

Noemi

permalink written by  Noemi y Carlos on November 9, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: MI VIDA EN BARCELONA, MI CASA
tagged London

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Mind the gap

London, United Kingdom


Just got back from looking around downtown London. The atmosphere is great. I love the cobblestones, they just seem to add so much character. We got home at about twenty past five, Shelley hit the wall and went to sleep as soon as we got back. We took the Jubilee line from where we're staying (Dollis Hill) into London Bridge, deciding to walk from there. First stop was the Tower Bridge. We then traipsed down to St Paul's Cathedral. I can't believe the size of the bloody thing! We walked back the way we came and had dinner at an Irish pub. Two meals and beers for less than thirty bucks - not too shabby. I decided to take the plunge and see if Guinness really is better over here. The answer - hell yeah! Looking forward to Ireland just to taste it over there. Can't say I've ever been a fan of Guinness in Australia but the stuff here really is good gear.

Shelley bought a sim card for her phone whilst we were out. The salesman was a big black guy with two slits in his right eyebrow (Shelley refused to believe my story that the slits were for the number of people he's killed) and two massive Cubic Zirconia earrings. This guy helped break one of my first aims of being in the UK - going a day without some bastard talking about Neighbors or Home and Away. He didn't shut-up about Home and Away.

The weather was quite nice today. Brisk, yes, but the sun was very bright and I was never freezing cold. The other misconception I had was about how everything is supposed to be expensive here. It isn't. I also figured out why the Pom's enslaved Ireland - Ireland must be full of brick factories, 'cause I swear I didn't see many buildings made out of anything else. Apart from the Ad nauseum repetition of copy-cat houses, the architecture is staggering. We went to a train station where the architect obviously decided to go for looks rather than functionality alone and I'm a big fan of that. London gets my award for the ease of travel through its train system. We purchased an Off-Peak pass for three days, costing about $56 Australian. Seems pretty expensive, but one-way in peak time costs $10, so it's definitely worth it. One of the more peculiar things, I thought, was a station with "mind the gap" emblazoned on the platform, as well as a constant "mind the gap" message played over the PA. We minded the gap. Downtown printed on areas people cross the street are the words "Look Left" and "Look Right". Didn't really work for me, I just kept looking at the ground!

Tomorrow we'll go on a tour of London tower. I love the history involved with it. Shelley might give the ice-skating there a burl as well. We'll meet up with Shelley's friend Abby tomorrow night and I've organised to meet up with my mate Mark on Thursday night. We're either looking at hanging around Wimbledon (his area) or meeting up in the city.

The room in the hostel is nice and warm and the heater is on the wall next to my bed so I'm guaranteed a toasty night.

permalink written by  10bastards on November 25, 2008 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: Eurotrip
tagged London

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beginning

London, United Kingdom


It was a dark and stormy day: I had arrived in London. It turned out that before I was to travel to Wales, I needed to stay in London for the Arcadia orientation. The first couple of days were fairly regimented; meetings, lectures, and a tour or two, but by Wednesday we were pretty much on our own.

The most interesting meeting occurred on Tuesday. That afternoon three members of the British Parliament (Labour party, Conservative party, and Liberal Democrat party were all represented) came to answer any questions we had for them! I asked about the surveillance in the UK. On the plane ride up I had read an article about an eight year old girl caught on surveillance hiding a pair of her friend's shoes. On account of cameras in the classroom, the girl was given a yellow slip (after three of those she would be suspended). The mother of the girl whose shoes were hidden was pleased, and the mother of the girl who was punished was outraged. She said she had liked the idea of the cameras to begin with, but she felt that using them for the purposes of punishing a little girl's prank was extreme, and she no longer felt they were a good idea. After reading "Little Brother" on account of Tommy's recommendation (http://craphound.com/littlebrother/download/ :It talks about how surveillance is eroding our rights to privacy) I agree with the outraged mother.

All of the parliament members felt uncomfortable with so many cameras, and the steadily increasing numbers of cameras, but they said that until there was a "more normal" way to keep track of crime, cameras were part of governmental systems. The Labour Party representative mentioned that people ask for more cameras in the streets, so I wonder how equivalent people's sense of security in having cameras is compared to the actual security cameras offer.

On Wednesday evening we were given tickets to go see Queen's rock opera musical: "We Will Rock You" which was fantastic. The costuming and music were amazing, and more than made up for the contrived plotline.

Thursday was a free day. After mentioning the graffiti artist Banksy to one of the Arcadia Representatives, she let me borrow her Banksy tour of London book (!) so I spent the day going on my own graffiti tour of London!

I spent a long time thinking about the reading Emily picked out for my Paideia group last semester about graffiti, and the aesthetic of control. It seemed, especially after the discussion about surveillance, more and more silly that graffiti is taboo, and in addition to being aware of graffiti on the walls, I was more aware of blank white or beige walls, and how boring that can be!


Most of Banksy's work was destroyed, painted over, or completely missing. :(

It was really fun to look for his graffiti though; I went to parts of London I never would have seen otherwise, and I found it really interesting that while some people had stolen his work to sell it on ebay, some people made an effort to paint around it. Other graffiti artists tagged on or near his work (like the puzzle piece on the rat's sign). The book I was using was written by a graffiti fan who just notices the world around him.



permalink written by  outlawedwings on January 23, 2009 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: triple_strung_heart
tagged London, England, Graffiti, Banksy, Paint, Rat, Arcadia, StudyAbroad and Surveillance

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ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA - LONDON, ENGLAND

Adelaide, Australia


Our family holiday to Europe started in the Qantas lounge at Adelaide airport where we said goodbye to my Nanna and Pa. (In the lounge we sat next to the Crows players who were on their way to Perth - my Nanna was pretty excited about that!) My Mum, Dad, sister and I boarded our plane at 5.40 pm and flew from Adelaide to Sydney. We then flew from Sydney to Singapore in a Qantas 747/400. On this flight I watched movies and played games on my own screen - I only had about 3 hours sleep. We saw the Himalayas as we flew over.

We arrived in London at noon on Sunday 11 April. My Uncle Peter picked us up from Heathrow Airport. We went back to his apartment in Paddington, central London, where we stayed for 6 nights with him, Aunt Nicola and my 9 month old cousin, Josephine. We then went for a long walk around London, through Hyde Park and to the Science Museum.

We saw a lot of places/streets whose names are in the English “Monopoly” game, such as Mayfair, Park Lane, Oxford Street, Piccadilly Circus and Trafalgar Square.

permalink written by  Decco21 on April 10, 2004 from Adelaide, Australia
from the travel blog: Europe 2004
tagged London, Airport, Adelaide and Qantas

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LONDON, ENGLAND

London, United Kingdom


Today we caught a London double-decker bus to the Tower Bridge. We walked over the bridge and visited the HMS Belfast, a WWII English warship. After that we walked back across London Bridge to Leicester Square and Trafalgar Square. We climbed a tall monument (202 feet high) that marked the spot where the London fire started in 1666. We then walked to Buckingham Palace, where the Queen of England lives, before walking home.


permalink written by  Decco21 on April 12, 2004 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: Europe 2004
tagged London and BuckinghamPalace

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Booking continues

London, United Kingdom


Most visas, tickets, hotels and gadgets have been procured.

permalink written by  johnjmason on July 19, 2009 from London, United Kingdom
from the travel blog: Trans Mongolian
tagged London, Planning and Preperations

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