So I began making a list of my favorites under different categories to organize my thoughts. I must admit that I got the idea to post my favorites on my blog from a friend who was with me in London. So enjoy my top favorites (out of may) from life in the UK.
P.S. - I didn't include our trip to Paris (except for one painting which I just couldn't resist including). My top five are in no particular order.
Top Five London Experiences
Places in the City
Right next door, huge, and beautiful. I loved going to the park and pretending to read while really watching adorable families wander and play.
I loved the people watching, the exploring, antiques . . . especially the old books! Even though Saturdays were crazy the atmosphere was great.
- Trafalgar Square
I can't even explain to you how much I love this place. There is just something about the fountains, the statues, the traffic, the museum, Big Ben in the background (which, in this picture is covered by the spray of the fountain) . . . the list could go on and on.
- Thames (especially near Parliament)
- Walking across the Millennium Bridge (especially on a Sunny Day)!
Cathedrals
- Canterbury Cathedral
- Westminster Abbey
- St. Paul's Cathedral
- Winchester Cathedral
- Tintern Abbey
A romantic place. Romantic in the sense of the Romantic period. Tintern abbey was dismantled during the Dissilutionment of the monasteries during the Protestant Revolution and the ruins were made popular again by poets of the Romantic period such as Wordsworth. When we visited the abbey it was beautiful, with fall colors all around the valley and the abbey open to the fresh air.
- LDS London Temple (okay so it's not a cathedral but it was up there on the list)
Favorite Museums/Galleries
- National Gallery
I visited the National Gallery the most out of the many art galleries I saw on the program . . . can you tell I loved it?
- Cabinet War Rooms
Nate and my Dad went to the Cabinet War Rooms when the family was in London (the girls visited the V&A fashion exhibit). After we met back up, Nate just raved about how awesome the War Rooms were . . . strange for my museum hating brother, but he was right. When I visited the museum with the program it kept us entertained for hours.
- Merseyside Maritime Museum, Liverpool
- Imperial War Museum
- British Museum
Great UK Cities/Towns
- London
- Bath
- Bibury, Cotswolds
- Llandundo, Wales
- Haworth
British Nature
- Stourhead
- The Lake District
Probably the most beautiful gardens I have ever seen, actually, not probably, they are the most beautiful gardens I have ever seen. This is how I imagine the Garden of Eden.
If I could pick anywhere in England to have a vacation home it would be in the Lake District. There were actually "mountains" or what can only resemble mountains in the UK, and the lakes. We took a long walk through the hillsides to Dove Cottage, home of the Wordsworth's. Beautiful hiking area with amazing views.
- Lands End Cliff walk . . . and swim
When I think back to our first trip on the program it still feels like a dream. It didn't even feel like we were in the UK, it felt more like we were touring the Mediterranean. We had the perfect weather and got to swim in the English Channel/Atlantic Ocean.
- Coal Mine tour
- Nature Walk
Even though I love London, at heart I am a girl who loves open spaces and nature, so this walk was a great break from the city. We enjoyed the wild blackberries along the way.
Historic Sites
- Stonehenge
- Blenheim Palace
- Warick Castle
- Albert Dock
I actually liked Blenheim palace better than Windsor Castle, it had more character, plus grounds you could explore. This is where Winston Churchill was born and has connections to the Spencer family (you know, Princess Diana?).
Warick was cool to see different phases in a castle's history. It's kind of a tourist spot now but still entertaining.
Albert Dock is an amazing place to contemplate your heritage. I can't imagine sailing out of the harbor and watching as your home disappears into the distance.
- Chatsworth
Chatsworth was a fun mix of modern and historical. There was plenty of history shared but there was also a lot of modern art, it had a fresh atmosphere. If you visit don't miss the sculpture gallery, it includes the bust of Mr. Darcy from the new Pride and Prejudice film.
Dance and Music
- Handel's Messiah
- Evensong at Christ Church
I anticipated this performance all semester and it really was amazing. If you ever get the chance to see a performance at the Barbican go! If you ever get the chance to see Handel's Messiah performed go!
- Beethoven's Violin Concerto & Mahler
- Even though I enjoyed Beethoven I loved Mahler.
- Aida (Opera)
- Swan Lake
Hey, I'm not really an Opera kind of girl but it was a once in a lifetime specticle.
Paintings
- JMW Turner - Sun Setting Over a Lake (Tate Britain)
Really, I love most of Turner's watercolors, especially this one and Rain, Steam and Speed. I've heard professors tell me that reproductions are nothing like the originals . . . but I've never understood what they meant until now.
- Cuno Amiet - Snowy Landscape (Musee d'Orsay)
This is my one exception to the "UK only" rule. I LOVE this painting. It's a large painting, over four square meters. When you see the painting from a distance you see a huge mass of white with only a grey line across the top, it isn't until you get closer you notice the skier. It is a commanding painting and immediately stuck with me.
- Akseli Gallen-Kallela - Lake Keitele (National Gallery)
- Monet - The Thames Below Westminster
- Rembrandt - Woman Bathing in a Stream
Like Turner, I love pretty much anything from Rembrandt. I just love the dark, mysterious backgrounds and the lighting surrounding the figures of the works.
- Rothko - Seagram Murals
Plays
- Wicked
I've been waiting to see this play for a very long time. I love the music and now I love the play too!
- War Horse
- Les Miserables
- Love's Labour's Lost
- Merry Wives Windsor
Food
- Snog
- Gelato Mio
- Amish Oatmeal
- Pub Food
- Hot Bread
When we were lucky enough to get Amish Oatmeal for breakfast it was the only time all the girls would wake up and rush to breakfast at 7:30 am. Since I was on the first floor with my roommates, as soon as I would realize that we were having Amish Oatmeal for breakfast I would run back into the room and whisper "It's oatmeal!" and the girls would roll out of bed immediately (like zombies), throw a sweatshirt on and hurry to get in line. It was quite the scene.
Other
- My Roommates!
Left to right: Me, Kayla, Kaitlyn, Hailee, Laura S., Dasily, Laura C., and Bethany. We bonded immediately (unlike some rooms that never really bonded at all) when, on the first night we decided to all pile on Hailee's "shorter-than-everyone-elses bed" and Hailee decided that she wanted to rearrange the room at midnight. We love each other!
- The Tube
- "Mind the Gap!" The best way to get around the city.
- Music on the Underground
The soundtrack to my life. Musicians sit in the underground and play for any donations they can get. I loved stepping off a train and hearing music wherever I went. I felt like I was in a movie everytime.
- The Accent
- Student Discounts!
- Church
Who can resist the accent? I miss the accent so much that when I hear it now I freeze and have to stop and listen for a mo'.
There are Student Discounts everywhere in London. I've started asking stores here if they have them because they were so brilliant. Clothes stores would give students 10% off, even on sale items!!! But plays were the best. It wasn't unusual for us to stand in line for day-of tickets and get 6th row seats for 20 pounds while the couple behind us can only get bad seats for 45 pounds.
- Polite Requests
- Popular Culture
The British are known for their politeness. If you bumped into someone they would end up apologizing for your mistake. Museums often had signs posted stating: Please try not to Touch. But my favorite was announced before any performance when they would ask for cell phones to be turned off and then state: Please keep coughing to a minimum.