Robyn's one request was to do the Fat Tire Bike Tour. The Thames one only ran on Thurs-Sat., so we did the Royal Parks one instead.
Instead of bells to let people know when we were coming, we had these little guys who made squeeky bath toy noises. It was awesome..lol
I was not talented enough to take photos while riding my bike, so all the shots you will see are taken while I was not on them. Robyn on the other hand, was quite the multi-tasker.
Break for lunch at Trafalgar Square
I was not talented enough to take photos while riding my bike, so all the shots you will see are taken while I was not on them. Robyn on the other hand, was quite the multi-tasker.
Break for lunch at Trafalgar Square
All of our squeakers!
This is the back of 10 Downing Street where the Prime Minister lives (basically like the White House). Our tour guide told us the PM hasn't lived there for 2 years, but this was news to me, news to the guards with the machine guns, and the masses of people waiting outside the front gate... Not sure who to believe.
Old Admiralty Building at Horse Guards Parade. We obviously missed the parade of horses.
Also at the Horse Guards Parade. The building covered in vines is apparently a bomb-proof citadel built in 1940.
Our tour guide talking about Westminster Abbey
View of Whitehall roofs from a bridge in St. James's Park
Hyde Park
So after the tour, it was time for some soft serve ice cream with a flake!
Not sure what this was. Looked like a Buddhist temple in the middle of Kensington Park
Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Garden
We happened to take our tour on the 13th anniversary of Princess Diana's death (she dies August 31, 1997). This is her memorial fountain in Hyde Park. It was designed to be like a necklace to express her feminism and be interactive so that people would hang out in the area and not just view a statue and leave. There were tons of families sitting out around the area, and little kids enjoying the cool fresh water, so it seemed succesful to me.
Austrailian War Memorial in Hyde Park Corner to commemorate the 102,000 Austrailians who died in the First and Second War.
So at Hyde Park Corner, they have horse crossings! The buttons are of course like 6 feet tall so people on horses can reach them. We saw tons of horse poo in the road, but where in the world are these horses coming from?
Hold your horses! (sorry, couldn't resist)
St. James's Park-we walked the route the bike tour had taken us to get better photos
View from the same bridge as above in St. James's Park
Horse Guards Parade (on our walk-not bike ride)
A walk down Whitehall
So as you can see from this post, Robyn and I took the 11 a.m. Royal Parks Fat Tire bike tour. We started at Queensway, rode through Kensginton Park (stopped at Kensington Palace where Princess Diana had lived, but we couldnt see it as it was being renovated-lots of things are being renovated now so that they are all done in 2012 for the Olympics). Then we did the length of Kensginton Park passing the Serpentine Gallery, rode past The Serpentine (body of water in Hyde Park), through Hyde Park (via Hyde Park Corner), through Green Park, down The Mall passing St. James's Park, and over to Trafalgar Square where we breaked for lunch. From there we did the Horse Guards Parade (which I had never seen, well not recently) down to Westiminster Abbey, then back through the parks to Queensway. Surprisingly enough, I wasn't the worst bike rider in the group- one young kid ran into a wall. However, it was tough work to start and stop at the intersections. Luckily though, we spent very little time on the roads of London as they are CRAZY drivers and riding on the opposite side of the road is tricky!
After the tour, Robyn and I walked basically the intital route through the parks down to Westminster to get some pictures of the sun setting at Parliament. As she was leaving the next morning (at like 6), we wanted to do a nice sit down dinner, but by the time we got to that area, we were too exhuasted and starving to walk anymore to find somewhere. So we ended up eating Burger King at Waterloo train station (Robyn ate a bagel sandwich from somewhere else). So not quite the send-off I would have liked, but man if felt awesome to get home and go to bed that night.
yummmmmm. soft-serve ice cream with a flake. sounds like a becky dessert if i've ever heard one!! :)
ReplyDeleteHahahah! I bet yalls sqeekers were better than the Honda horns! :) Ice cream with a flake....YUMMMO. Isnt that what they call a 99? We need those horse lights here in TEXAS! You know with all the folks riden' horses!
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