We arrived in London about 11 a.m. local time. After waiting
in the proper customs line for a while, we handed over our passports and flight
cards, and were then subject to a bit of scrutiny from the immigrations
officer, as she clearly wasn’t pleased that two seventeen-year-olds were
travelling alone and were not planning on meeting up with any adults. However,
after we produced our notarized letters of consent (thanks, moms and dads), she
was forced to let us proceed into GREAT BRITAIN! Actually, it wasn’t quite that
simple, because first we had to figure out how to buy an underground ticket
(and certain machines would only take correct change or wouldn’t take our
credit cards), and then we were stuck behind the barriers for… some reason.
Then, we sat on a rather crowded train for forty or so
minutes, across from two young women who had just graduated from Purdue
University (both with degrees in Mechanical Engineering). The man sitting next
to them struck up a conversation with the pair (he’s from L.A., used to write
for the show E.R., and is currently working on an animated movie featuring an
orangutan), so we basically just eavesdropped on their conversation the entire
time.
At the appropriate stop, we managed to wrench ourselves (and
our suitcases) out of the crowded train car, and then experienced our first
real adventure in NAVIGATION. Destination: our hotel. After doing little more
than dropping our suitcases on the floor and figuring out how the light
switches worked, we headed off for NAVIGATION ROUND 2. Destination: Golden
Tours bus stop in Trafalgar Square. Again, after not too much trouble, we did
make it there, and immediately raced to the top of the blue double-decker bus. Notable
sights included St. Paul’s Cathedral, a blue egg-shaped building featured in
“The Blind Banker,” and Tower Bridge.
| London from our tour bus. (From Tower Bridge.) |
| All we saw of Westminster Abbey |
Sara wanted to see Westminster Abbey, so we got off on the
London Eye side of the bridge, and proceeded to walk towards the Parliament
buildings/Big Ben/Westminster. We stopped along the way to take pictures of the
bridge that twists in the opening scene of “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood
Prince.” After a few moments of meandering (and being pelted by hail), we found
our way to the Abbey, only to be told that it was closed to visitors for the
day. Oh, well. We tried. We then thought we’d be clever and simply go to the
next stop on the bus tour, rather than walking back across the bridge. As Sara
puts it, “We sort of knew where we were. We just didn’t know where we were in
relation to where the bus stop was supposed to be.” As you can imagine, there
was a bit of confusion as we tried to navigate using the bus tour’s woefully
incomplete map. Still, we got to see St. James Park, and a helpful British lady
did try to steer us in the right direction. Eventually, we ended up walking
back across the bridge and meeting up with the next tour bus there.
| The oncoming storm. |
We stayed on the bus until around Buckingham Palace, at
which point we had to consider which bus would take us back in the direction of
the hotel and such. If the bus
company had actually followed their own posted schedule, we would have been
fine. Needless to say, that didn’t actually occur. Still, we saw the front of
Buckingham Palace, and we got back to Victoria Station when we gave up on the
bus. We ate a very calm, warm dinner there (it was rather chilly today) and
then took the Underground back towards our hotel. There were three spectacular
elements to this final trip: one, we bought Oyster cards; two, we did a
transfer and navigated very easily; and three, we found our way back to our
hotel without difficulties.
All in all, it’s been a great day. We’re starting to get our
bearings, and it’s incredibly exciting to be able to say (or even think),
“WE’RE IN LONDON!!!” And when we wake up tomorrow, we will still BE IN LONDON!!!
More later,
Miel (& Sara)
Sara, I looked at the phone plan again on-line. It says you should be able to text for 10p each everywhere you're going. Maybe they have to enable it on your account?
ReplyDeleteYour phone should be able to help you navigate and find sites, shops, and Wi-Fi. Just make sure you don't enable the 3G access.
Just to let you know, all of your London map apps were completely useless (they wouldn't load or only showed part of the city), although I did eventually get one to work, and the Paris one seems to work. I will use the Wi-Fi finder if the university next door decides to protect their internet.
DeleteOops.
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