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1. The Tower of London and Crown Jewels
2. London Eye
3. The Royal Observatory in Greenwich (take a ferry down the Thames)
4. Westminster Abbey
5. St. Paul's Cathedral
6. Shopping on Regent and Oxford Streets
7. Gotta do a pub lunch. Look at some of the pubs along The Strand (over by the Savoy) or behind St. James' Palace.
8. Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace (walk through Admiralty Arch and walk up the Mall. St. James' Palace will be on your right, then Clarence House, where HRH the Prince of Wales lives, it was his gran's old place)
9. The British Museum - it's huge so think about a few things you'd like to focus on, I pick the Elgin Marbles and Egyptian Rooms.
10. Sunday in Hyde Park, go to Speaker's Corner and hear all strange opinions. It's truly free speech.
In addition to Allan's excellent list, here are a few more things to see or do while there. You can get a lot in 10 days...
1. A Jack the Ripper tour with Ripper expert Donald Rumbelow.
2. Take a 90 minute train ride for a day trip to Bath
3. See Churchill's war headquarters in the Cabinet War Rooms and Churchill Museum
4. Walk across the zebra crossing in front of the Abbey Road Studios and check out all the Beatle fan grafitti
5. Kew Gardens
6. Imperial War Museum
7. Spend time looking at the very expensive merchandise at Harrod's...have lunch in the food hall, then do your actual buying at Marks & Spencer
8. See a play. Just as good as Broadway but much easier on the pocketbook
9. After riding the Eye, stroll east along the Thames for a bit and see Shakespeare's Old Globe Theatre
10. If you have a day left, take the Eurostar from Waterloo Station for a day trip to Paris
More here: http://wheelstraveler.blogspot.com/search?q=london+england
-Darryl
Eurostar has moved from Waterloo and now leaves from the refurbished St. Pancras Station.
Allan
Darryl Musick said:In addition to Allan's excellent list, here are a few more things to see or do while there. You can get a lot in 10 days...
1. A Jack the Ripper tour with Ripper expert Donald Rumbelow.
2. Take a 90 minute train ride for a day trip to Bath
3. See Churchill's war headquarters in the Cabinet War Rooms and Churchill Museum
4. Walk across the zebra crossing in front of the Abbey Road Studios and check out all the Beatle fan grafitti
5. Kew Gardens
6. Imperial War Museum
7. Spend time looking at the very expensive merchandise at Harrod's...have lunch in the food hall, then do your actual buying at Marks & Spencer
8. See a play. Just as good as Broadway but much easier on the pocketbook
9. After riding the Eye, stroll east along the Thames for a bit and see Shakespeare's Old Globe Theatre
10. If you have a day left, take the Eurostar from Waterloo Station for a day trip to Paris
More here: http://wheelstraveler.blogspot.com/search?q=london+england
-Darryl
Any suggestions for 24 hours? Just a stopover but I want to see anything I can!
Yikes! Wear comfortable shoes. Given the short time, I would skip a number of things where you have to line up.
Head to Covent Garden. Plan to have a quick, early lunch there. Then hoof it over to Trafalgar Square. Maybe a quick visit to the National Gallery and/or National Portrait Gallery. Then walk across the Square though Admiralty Arch and walk up The Mall to Buckingham Palace. At the Palace, depending on day, time of day, you might consider a tour of the Royal Mews or the Queen's Gallery (old chapel that was bombed and now has various pieces from the Royal Collection - but if there's a ling up, skip it and leave it for another visit). When you're facing the Palace on your right is Green Park. Hoof it through there, along the Queen's Walk. You'll come out by The Ritz. Turn right on Piccadilly and walk towards Piccadilly Circus. This will take you past Fortnum and Mason and my favourite book store, Thatcher's, which is the Queen's bookstore. Allow yourself to linger some and maybe pop into some shops either here or Regent Street.
In the evening, consider a turn on the London Eye and a dinner reservation on a river boat. You'll have a decent meal, music and see Tower Bridge and the Tower of London illuminated.
If you're seriously into bling and history, focus just on heading to the Tower of London. In high season it can be a one-to-two hour wait to get in and then an hour or two to tour it, so it will eat up a lot of your day.
Just consider the 24-hours as a sampler for what you will do when you come back.
Maureen Blevins said:Any suggestions for 24 hours? Just a stopover but I want to see anything I can!
Thanks Allan! Will be there on a weekday, so I'm hoping for shorter lines. And I am definately just considering this as sort of a tease for a future trip! Would love to just see Big Ben, Wesminster Abbey, and Buckingham Palace. Very touristy of me but I want to ride a big red double-decker bus! Good idea or not?
Allan Lynch said:Yikes! Wear comfortable shoes. Given the short time, I would skip a number of things where you have to line up.
Head to Covent Garden. Plan to have a quick, early lunch there. Then hoof it over to Trafalgar Square. Maybe a quick visit to the National Gallery and/or National Portrait Gallery. Then walk across the Square though Admiralty Arch and walk up The Mall to Buckingham Palace. At the Palace, depending on day, time of day, you might consider a tour of the Royal Mews or the Queen's Gallery (old chapel that was bombed and now has various pieces from the Royal Collection - but if there's a ling up, skip it and leave it for another visit). When you're facing the Palace on your right is Green Park. Hoof it through there, along the Queen's Walk. You'll come out by The Ritz. Turn right on Piccadilly and walk towards Piccadilly Circus. This will take you past Fortnum and Mason and my favourite book store, Thatcher's, which is the Queen's bookstore. Allow yourself to linger some and maybe pop into some shops either here or Regent Street.
In the evening, consider a turn on the London Eye and a dinner reservation on a river boat. You'll have a decent meal, music and see Tower Bridge and the Tower of London illuminated.
If you're seriously into bling and history, focus just on heading to the Tower of London. In high season it can be a one-to-two hour wait to get in and then an hour or two to tour it, so it will eat up a lot of your day.
Just consider the 24-hours as a sampler for what you will do when you come back.
Maureen Blevins said:Any suggestions for 24 hours? Just a stopover but I want to see anything I can!
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