Friday, April 12, 2019

London Day 7



Friday April 12, 2019

On our final full day in London, we had a few things on our agenda. Claire wanted to go up the London Eye, but it was pretty expensive, so we decided to only have one of us go with her and let her choose who would accompany her. She chose Liz, so I went to have my own adventures in the morning.

My first destination was Battersea Power Station, an old coal power plant (which, thankfully, is no longer burning coal) with a cool, imposing art deco design. It was famously pictured on the cover of one of my favorite rock albums, Pink Floyd’s Animals. I took the underground and then transferred to a bus to go out and see it. To my disappointment, it was covered in scaffolding and had a forest of construction cranes around it. You could still see the four flues. But even in its current circumstances it was an impressive sight.



I returned to the St. Pancras area and decided to wander into the British Library to see their collection of historical documents. It was an incredibly impressive room. It famously includes the Magna Carta, but there are writings and sketches from Leonardo da Vinci, musical scores composed by Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, booklets used to save the text of Shakespeare’s sonnets, a Tynsdale bible, other illuminated religious manuscripts, and much, much more. A history buff could spend hours in this room. I perused the room for about an hour before heading back to the hotel room.

Liz here now to talk about the morning with Claire. We decided to take a double decker bus to get to the London Eye since Claire had only ridden on one for a couple minutes. According to Google, it would only take a few extra minutes compared to the Tube. Well, Google was wrong and it took about 15+ extra minutes but we had allotted ourselves extra time so it was okay. The London Eye was, well, an overpriced ferris wheel. It was fine, but I wouldn't recommend it if you visit London unless you really have a thing for ferris wheels. I'm glad the sky was at least clear so we had a view. Claire and I played "I Spy" during the 30 minutes it takes to make the full rotation. Part of the advertised London Eye attraction was a 4 minute 4-D movie about touring London which we watched afterwards. Claire has never even seen a 3-D movie before so it was really cute watching her duck when birds flew by and reach out to pop bubbles that had been blown.

Another shot from atop a double decker bus

London Eye view northeast of the Thames

Northwest of the Thames

Ready for the 4-D movie
Claire got to play a little bit on the nearby playground and then we bought some souvenirs and stopped at a Sainsbury's grocery store to pick some things up before meeting back up with Mark.


(Mark again here.) We met Steve Wheeler for lunch at the Google office, which is conveniently located right next to St. Pancras Station. Once he checked us in, we admired the courtyard, which has an open space all the way up to the ceiling of the top floor. Each floor has glass panes surrounding the courtyard, and everybody has used post-it notes to make pixel art. There were a few standards (Link, various Pokemon, a mushroom from Mario) but there were also a few surprises, such as Calvin and Hobbes, Psy (of “Gangnam Style” fame), Totoro, and the Internet Explorer logo. He took us to the cafeteria on the bottom floor, where we could help ourselves to whatever we wanted, no charge. Liz and I both went for the Vietnamese rice noodle salad bar, but I sampled a few other items such as the tandoori chicken and steamed bok choy. The orange juice was freshly squeezed, and absolutely delicious. They also had a few desserts – we chose a kind of chocolate mousse in a small glass, with various things on top such as cashews. Afterward, he took us to the roof to admire the view of London. We thanked Steve, said our goodbyes, and went back to the hotel to rest for a spell.


View of King's Cross and St. Pancras stations from the Google building
Our final destination for the day was the Warner Brothers studio tour, which is northwest of London in Leavesden (near Watford). We took the Overground to Watford Junction from Euston station. From there, we hopped on a themed double-decker bus which took us the rest of the way. We sat on the top deck, and Liz was sitting next to a Belgian girl who was terribly excited to be visiting. Claire was pretty happy to be going, too, and enthusiastically bounded toward the studio when we arrived.


Pole dancing on the train to WB studios
The tour itself was very impressive. The atrium had a large dragon hanging from the ceiling. We watched an introductory video, and then they let us into the Great Hall. All of the sets we saw were the real sets from the films. They included the Gryffindor common room, the boys’ dormitory, the potions classroom, Malfoy Manor, the Forbidden Forest, Gringott’s, Platform 9 ¾, and of course, Diagon Alley. Claire was really interested in getting her tour passport stamped and finding all the hidden golden snitches. The tour ends with the large model of Hogwart’s, which was truly impressive. Claire said “Oh my!” when we came across it. It had an extraordinary level of detail and you got to walk around and see it from all angles. We took lots of pictures. Be prepared for an overload right here. Claire’s favorite part was holding out her hand to make a broomstick levitate off the ground to it.


The UK's favorite family

HP's cupboard bedroom

Great Hall


Doors at the Great Hall



There were golden snitches hidden throughout the tour. Claire loved finding them.


Real wigs used for the Weasley twins and others

Gryffindor common room

Dean and Harry's beds in the boys' dormitory

Hagrid's hut
Dumbledore's office


Claire said "Up!" and raised the broomstick
Potions classroom. The details were incredible. This was one of Liz's favorite displays.




The Weasleys' home - The Burrow. Magical knitting and ironing were happening on the set.

Meeting of the Death Eaters

Entrance to the forbidden forest








Butterbeer! Tasted like butterscotch.

Butterbeer ice cream! Tasted like froth and less butterscotchy than the butterbeer. But still delicious.


Dursleys' living room

Mandrakes

Claire got to control Dobby's actions with her movement.
She kept hitting herself on the head like he does. :D

Gremlin face masks

Gringott's bank - it was really impressive!

Vault at Gringott's

Vault of Bellatrix Lestrange

Claire got the sword of Gryffindor!

Diagon Alley

The Weasleys' joke shop.

HOGWARTS!

It took us some effort to find a decent souvenir as all the shirts were very expensive, as were the candies (we really did not want to pay 8 pounds for a chocolate frog). We settled on a small Lego set, which Claire was satisfied with. To get home, we returned to Watford Junction but this time hopped on a West Midlands train, which was faster and much more comfortable than the Overground. We got back to the hotel for a late bedtime for Claire, but she went to bed happy.


Claire hiding under her hotel bed