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Europe UK

What Lies Beneath? Intriguing Cold War online exhibit from Britain’s Imperial War Museum

A recent letter from one of my readers led me to a terrific “online exhibition” about British experiences in the Cold War – it is very well done and would be suitable for tweens and teens, whether they’re on a trip to the UK or not….

From reader Tom:

“Hi Sheila,

My name is Tom and I’m from the UK. Just getting in touch as I have a great suggestion for a family activity in London.

I recently had a day out with my kids at the Imperial War Museum. Whilst we were there, we saw this being advertised….

(If you can’t see the box below, here’s the direct link to the video URL.)

This short video is an ‘introduction’ to this [site] https://www.whatliesbeneath.org.uk

When we got back we went online to investigate. It’s a site that acts as an online exhibition of sorts, looking at the Cold War. Clearly it is aimed at slightly older children, but my eldest boy (who is 12) absolutely loved it (probably something to do with the fact that he wants to be James Bond!) I thought it was an excellent way to finish the trip, but I think it could even be a good stand-alone activity. It’s fun and interactive and they can learn a bit at the same time, which is always a bonus. It can also act as a bit of an introduction to the [Imperial War Museum] itself if perhaps people are unsure if they want to visit or not.

I’d like to help spread the word a bit so as other parents and their children can get as much enjoyment out of it as we did, so it would great if you could post it.”

Sure, Tom, and thanks very much for sending the info!

This seems like a great way to learn history in an interesting, interactive way (and not least because I discovered the James Bond books as a teen myself, and was enthralled.)  Check it out online, follow the Museum on Twitter, and plan a stop at the Museum the next time you’re in London.

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Europe

Get rubbed the right way in London

Brass Rubbing Centre projects (courtesy Christabelle at flickr's Creative Commons)A fun London activity for kids is deep inside the crypt of St. Martin-in-the-Fields Church in Trafalgar Square — the London Brass Rubbing Centre.

Rubbings are a way of putting an image on paper without damaging the item underneath. The ones used at the Centre are brass replicas of artworks depicting typically English people like medieval ladies, knights and St. George.

You put the paper over the image and rub with a special crayon, and the imprint comes out on the paper, which you keep. There is a small fee.

It’s harder than it looks because many of their replicas are very detailed and need a lot of rather hard rubbing; pick a smallish-sized item for the younger children.

The crypt also has a gift shop and a nice cafe.

St. Martin-in-the-Fields is well-known as a lovely place for music, both sacred and secular, so try to time your family’s visit to coincide with a concert (at lunchtime they feature works played by young musicians and students.) This is the home of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, a classical music group formed in 1958 and led by Sir Neville Marriner, so there are plenty of classical concerts but also some jazz.

The Web site has the full concert schedule. To get there, the closest Tube station is Charing Cross.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, London, Brass Rubbing Centre, St Martin in the Fields

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Europe

Pounded by the Pound Sterling

I’ve seen two items in one day indicating that my recent warnings about high-cost London and Britain are still accurate.

The UK’s Guardian says that “The prospect of a further UK interest rate rise this week and continued problems in the United States housing market combined yesterday to push the pound to its highest level against the dollar in more than a quarter of a century.” Read more here in Guardian’s business section.

Joe Brancatelli, a super-experienced business traveler who writes the Seat 2B column for the new Conde Nast Portfolio magazine, says, “Later, London” and laments that although he loves the town personally, having to pay DOUBLE New York prices is causing him to lose considerable enthusiasm.

Can you imagine the costs for travel with kids, the ones who don’t have business expense accounts?

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, London

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Europe

Update on travel with kids to London

View from the London Eye of the Thames and Westminster (courtesy wallyg at Flickr Creative Commons)

Maybe you’re being beaten bloody by your kids to go check out Harry Potter film locations since there’s a new Potter movie coming out this summer. Maybe you’d like to enjoy the Thames, exploring maritime heritage in a side trip to pretty Greenwich, or East London surprises like Canary Wharf.

Maybe you want to see England, Scotland or Wales now, simply because you never have before! Americans tend to think quite highly of the British, even with their quirks.

For whatever reason, if you’re planning a London or UK visit this summer or fall, just make sure that you’re ready for sticker shock.

The current exchange rate is making the already outrageously expensive spots even worse than usual. The budget travel guru himself, new blogger Arthur Frommer, just wrote about it in terms of the high costs at some of the more popular European destinations. (If you are going to Europe at all, check out the latest updated info on various countries from Rick Steves and his top sights in London.)

Travel writer and editor Tim Leffel, who blogs at Tim Leffel’s Cheapest Destinations (here’s his Cheap Europe category) has long recommended Eastern Europe for more bargains, and I guarantee that the UK and London are not in his book of World’s Cheapest Destinations.

Still, if you insist….

There are some freebies left in London (here’s ten of them that don’t include the usual fallback of museums) and Budget Travel tries to help with some kid-friendly hotel ideas and hotel rooms around $200/night, which is unfortunately often the norm for price. If you’re curious about Japanese capsule hotels, you can give one a try near London at the Gatwick airport, but I don’t know about squeezing in the kids. If money is less of an issue, how about this unusual hotel and its themed rooms?

The International Herald Tribune chimes in with budget places to eat.

Perhaps the shortest possible visit will help you save those pence — London in a weekend?

Other general London info I’ve found recently: the wonderful thoroughfare of Oxford Street is full of fun, and navigating the city is easier when you “mind the gap” and understand the Tube or Underground (subway) system — the UK newspaper The Guardian has an Underground Guide to help you.

They also give us the lowdown on good UK vegetarian places to eat, plus fun things to do in swank London hotels without actually staying in one (I’ll skip this recommendation at the Dorchester hotel: “The most unforgettable experience is to arrive for breakfast in the Grill Room, which is a cross between a Spanish palace and baroque chapel. This is a temple to traditional British cuisine, serving grilled kippers, bubble and squeak, lamb kidneys and kedgeree – the creamy dish of curried smoked haddock and rice that is the ultimate early-morning test of an enthusiastic foodie.”)

If you’re considering leaving the UK and crossing the English Channel during your trip, remember that you can still go the old-fashioned way — by sea. The UK’s Times newspaper has a complete guide to cross-Channel travel. You can also explore the UK by train; take a look at train enthusiast site The Man in Seat Sixty-One’s UK train travel page (hat tip to Vagablogging for telling me about this site.)

Finally, Frommer’s has a new podcast on London for the whole family that you can download and sneak onto your kid’s mp3 player.

Just thought you’d like to know….

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Europe, UK, London

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Europe

London Calling….

Enjoying Covent Garden, London (Scarborough photo)Time for a quick update from the European city that Americans love to visit….London.

We went several times and really enjoyed ourselves, but you need to watch your budget. It’s tough enough for a family to deal with plane tickets, crummy exchange rates and the high cost of urban hotels, but everything in London seems to cost a fortune.

Tips for cutting costs usually include things like eating at a lot of Indian/curry joints. Now, I adore Indian food, but I’m willing to bet that a lot of American kids haven’t exactly been snarfing down the chicken tikka masala or prawn curry on a regular basis. So here’s my suggestion before you go to London — take the kids to your local Indian restaurant and help them find dishes that they like, and you’ll be all set for squeezing those food costs in Britain.

Fodor’s has a good Travel Wire overview article on London, including sights, dining and lodging and their list of 10 free things to do, plus five more inexpensive options.

Near the Westminster Abbey Bookshop, London (Scarborough photo)

Lodging is always a big chunk of the budget, and Britain is starting to develop chain hotel options that can help. Here’s the info from the UK’s Times Online. I’d love to always stay at a cozy, charming B&B that welcomes kids, but it’s hard to tell what you’re getting from across the Atlantic.

Sometimes a chain works best; there are names like Ibis in Europe that are good for families but not well known by Americans.

For discount prices to a variety of city attractions like museums, you often can’t beat city passes. The UK’s Telegraph gives links to sites that sell such passes for London and also Edinburgh, Liverpool and York.

There is a Travelcard pass for the Tube (the Underground, or subway) and bus service; we used this and it was so nice to just flash the pass and not have to fumble around for change, especially with wiggly kids.

Take a look at the London Tourist Board’s Web site for family fun in the city, and I also like the layout of the LondonTown site, which has a pdf download right now for “what’s on” for the 2006 Christmas/holiday season. Time Out London always has loads of info about what’s going on in the city.

London’s calling….you really should go!

Update 29 December 2006: From the venerable New York Times “36 Hours in….” travel series, here’s 36 Hours in London.

Update 10 January 2007: CHOW, the online foodie magazine, has some very specific suggestions for less expensive London eats.

Update 09 February 2007: More cheap eats from TimeOut London (an invaluable Web site and magazine.)

Update 27 March 2007: There are some gorgeous Will van Overbeek photos of London sights on this National Geographic Traveler blog post. I also like this video, 24 Hours in London, from the concierge.com Web site.

Technorati Tags: family travel, travel, London

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Europe

London iPod Tours: Another View

As a follow-up to my previous posts on this topic, here’s a quick link to the Sydney Morning Herald’s article on touring London while (whilst?) listening to a guided tour on your iPod.

Have your listener also serve as your family’s tourguide; gives kids a chance to pontificate instead of always having to be on the receiving end.

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Europe

2 Good “NY Times” Links on Affordable European Travel

Sorry that I don’t have more time today for a longer post (Pisa and Florence with kids is coming tomorrow, promise!) but here are two links from the “New York Times” Travel section (free registration required:)

Affordable Europe — tips and budget tricks for 16 European cities

and

A Family Vacation in London — squeeze a pence till it hollers

See you in Italy tomorrow…. 

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Europe

Tower of London: Quoth the Raven, “Where’d They Go?”

Been wondering where  Baldrick, Gwyllum, Thor and the other Tower of London ravens have got to? 

Gadling got the answer; they’re indoors as a result of bird flu concerns.

Tower of London exterior, next to the Thames

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Europe

London Day Trip: Greenwich

Below Decks Aboard the Cutty Sark (Scarborough photo)The history-stuffed village of Greenwich is an easy day or half-day trip from London, downstream on the River Thames.

Do some investigating at the tourist Web site and decide what you and your family would like to see, but also think about how you want to get there.

I recommend taking a boat on the Thames, leaving from one of the piers at the Tower of London, Chelsea, Westminster or Thames Barrier.

You can come back to central London on the Docklands Light Railway (DLR.)

Our family’s favorite Greenwich sights include the magnificently restored tea clipper Cutty Sark, launched in 1869 and now in drydock next to the Thames. Kids love climbing all over the historic vessel.

We also enjoyed seeing where East meets West at 0 degrees longitude, the imaginary line around the globe that cuts through the Greenwich Royal Observatory and is known as the Prime Meridian.

This is where we get the term “Greenwich Mean Time” or GMT. Astride the Prime Meridian, Greenwich UK

Finally, pay a visit to the National Maritime Museum for all sorts of nautical exhibits befitting Britannia. Admission is free.

If you’d like some guidance, the always-reliable London Walks tours have the Historic Greenwich walk amongst their Tuesday offerings.

Update 11 October 2006: There’s a nice Greenwich overview article out on Frommer’s.

Update 24 August 2007: The ship suffered a horrific fire in May 2007, but crews are working frantically to restore it. The Visitor’s Center is open; click here for an update.

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Europe

Quick Links for London

Big Ben, London

Planning a trip to London this year? Here are a couple of my favorite links to get you started….try LondonTown; on their homepage right now is a downloadable PDF file on London for Families.

For all of us who love Harry Potter movies, don’t miss a chance to see where the scenes were filmed. The comprehensive Visit Britain site has a section that will guide you to London locations from the books and movies , plus lots of others outside the city and around Britain.

I highly recommend London Walks for moderately-priced and well-executed guided strolls around London. They go to familiar tourist spots, but the rather obscure neighborhood or theme walks are even more interesting and fun.

Harry Potter's Platform 9 and 3/4, London (Scarborough photo)

My older daughter and I went on their Pub Walk (she got to drink lots of lemonade.)

We sauntered along the Thames at sunset, saw the outside of the restored Globe Theater, popped into the Tate Modern for a good view, rounded a corner at night to stumble upon a replica of Sir Francis Drake’s “Golden Hind” Elizabethan warship floating in front of us….and of course enjoyed local company in several pubs.

Have a great time, but pack your brolly/umbrella.

Across the Thames from Westminster (Scarborough photo)