We made some new
friends in Fetcham and were invited back to cook for them anytime,
kinda cool really. I left Fetcham on Sunday and Rick dropped me dropped
off in Horley, just north of Gatwick airport at a Best Western there.
I met Penny at the train station early evening, she came down from
Holmes Chapel after visiting the other part of the family up there. I
didn't go because of all the baggage and the transfers we would have
had to make including one leg on the London Tube, not fun! Anyway, we
had a couple of days in Horley and went up to London on one of them.
I love to walk London, one of my favourite places on the planet to
walk around, so much to see, the history and all the activity!!! We
walked from Victoria station past Parliament and Big Ben,
10 Downing Street,
just missed Mr. Cameron, Horse Guards
and then by Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square.
Down The Strand past
the Savoy Hotel and took the scenic
route (the wrong way) to the British Museum. We did stop at the New London Theatre
and picked up some decent seats for Warhorse that night. Tough day :)
Now the The British Museum... Most of us have seen the old movies of mummies and the
Egyptologists and all, well this is where is all comes from. That and
more!!! Penny and I walked up to the a great stone edifice that is
“The British Museum” (which is free to enter by the way), left
the backpack at the coat check, walked into the main gallery and were
immediately blown away by its sheer size, a great round “inner
edifice” inside a huge inside space (sorry no pic here). A quick
“biffy” stop and we were off to the rooms on the left. We did not
get a map and only used the tall standing map in the room, so we knew
we were off to Egyptland LOL. The first thing we beheld as we entered
the room was the Rosetta Stone!
I was completely
over come with emotion as I was seeing with my own eyes one of the
“wonders” of archeology, the means of deciphering hieroglyphics
to Greek via an intermediary of Demotic text. You know, you read
about things and see pictures but nothing prepares you for when you
see the “thing” with your own eyes. I just stood there for
several minutes and took it in. It was the highlight of the entire
museum for me! Then off we walked through all the Egyptian and
Assyrian rooms on the ground floor of the museum seeing things
3000-5000 years old. We think in North America we have history at
300-500 years maybe back 1000-1500 but nothing like this…
We wandered the
museum for about 5 hours seeing artifacts from 7000 to a few hundred
years old. Bone and stone tools, 2000 year old glass, a clock from
the mid 16th century that was still running and playing
beautiful tunes with bells.
You could easily
spend days in the museum reading all the placards and pouring over
all the displays but we only had a few hours and throughly enjoyed it
all!
Time to leave the
museum and head for the show, “Warhorse”, but first a little
pizza and pasta with some red wine at a close by restaurant, it was
grand! “Warhorse” is the stage production of the movie from a few
years back where the actors are mostly human (some mannequins) and
the animals are all puppets with human puppeteers “running” them.
The adult horse, Joey, had three men wearing, cabling and poling the
legs and all but after a few minutes, it was just as some other
friends of ours who had seen it earlier this year said, all you see
is the horse. Amazing! The show was superb. The goose puppet pretty
much stole the show! Back to Horley late and an early start, 5am, for
the airport and a flight to Spain...
Thanks for the posts, such a joy to read them. It seems things are going so beautifully, just as I imagined they would for you! Please keep posting, and take care, Love, Tracey
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