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Posts Tagged ‘It’s Your London’

June Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

This June-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog post on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

Here’s your London Relocation review of June 2010 when we have seen the arrival of a stomping heat wave which is always a delight if a bit of a shock for us Londoners but has been great for play at Wimbledon.  Here are a few highlights from the last month and we’ll not be mentioning the football at all!

We have wonderful big royal events in London and they are amazing spectacles, especially if you can get to see them close up.  In June we have the Trooping of the Colour when the Queen celebrates her official birthday – she has 2 being the Queen and her actual birthday is in April.  Crowds gather outside Buckingham Palace and along the Mall from about 8 o’clock onwards to get a front spot to see the royals ride past.  From about 10 o’clock men in extraordinarily bright uniforms start to march past, then the massed bands gather and march down to Horse Guards Parade where the Trooping takes place. To get a seat for the main event means applying far ahead and being very lucky as you get grandstand views of the Queen inspecting her troops and then certain divisions parade their colours past her. The whole lot then march back up the Mall to Buckingham Palace and all the members of the royal family who are there for the event come out on the balcony to wave to the crowds, hear the 41 gun royal salute and watch the impressive fly past.  Once the royals are safely in the palace the crowd is allowed to rush up the gates to get a better view of the balcony.  It’s a great morning with a fun atmosphere and so much tradition being played out before you.  Here are a few photos to give you the general idea and I was so pleased to get a good one of the Queen but what about poor Prince Philip with the huge bearskin weighing him down!

Open Garden Squares weekend is a fabulous event for the nosey among us!  Many of the amazing gardens in London which you just can’t get into normally open their doors for one weekend and a single tickets at the reasonable sum of £7.50 gives you entry to all of them. There are so many to choose from that it’s really hard to pick a few but my favourites were the garden on top of the Ismaili mosque; the Kensington Roof Gardens and Crescent Gardens. The mosque garden was worth a visit as we could go into their prayer room as well which is very modern and is open to women as well. The Roof Gardens are extravagant and mad with Spanish, Tudor and English country gardens sections with pink flamingos to add to the fun. The photos are from here as it’s hard to believe this is the centre of London on top of a major shop!  Crescent Gardens are huge private communal gardens which are as big as a park and hidden away so you’d never see them – how the rich live!

On the theme of budget you can’t get better than free!  For a few evenings in the summer giant screens go up and there are live screenings of ballet or opera from the Royal Opera House. I went to see one in Trafalgar Square which was magical as the first ballet was beautiful and the advantage of it being a television feed is that you get good close ups. The ballet was Chroma by Wayne McGregor and it was performed by dancers in singlets and no shoes and was rawly brilliant with a driving score.  A couple of photos give you some idea of what it was like.

It’s been the best weather for going to riverside pubs so we went to Chiswick in west London for a Sunday lunchtime treat and here’s a photo to show how much effort they go to with their flowers to make it look great. Every pub with a garden in London has been packed out every night as we make the most of the heat (sorry to go on about it but last year summer was very brief!).  Other eating out has been in friends’ gardens – and in mine of course.   Regents Park hosted the annual Taste of London Festival where top restaurants take a section and serve 3 of their signature dishes in small but decent portions. It’s a great showcase for all things food and drink with lots of stalls offering tasters. We had evening tickets and it was a really fun time grazing and checking out all the different restaurants trying to choose the best ones for our 3 dishes.

I’m off to America for a couple of weeks in July but I’m sure there’ll still be plenty of London activities to tell you about in the two weeks I’ll be in London!

Sue Hillman

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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London Relocation Loves Arts Mentoring–Join in the Launch!

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Today we at London Relocation Ltd. are proud to spread the word on a new philanthropic organization, Arts Mentoring!  Founded by three local Notting Hill residents (including our dear friend and guest blogger, Sue Hillman, of It’s Your London tours), Arts Mentoring aims to bring the joy of art into the lives of orphan children, offering them sustenance for the soul.  As they say on their website:

“By ‘arts’ we mean everyone involved in artistic expression from singers, to actors, to painters, photographers, musicians but not limited to these at all!

At Arts Mentoring we know we have had the luxury of personal experience in the arts and  have always been keen supporters but we know that these experiences are not typical for millions of children around the world and in the UK and it was time to help change this.  Children whose lives are hard can find joy through the arts as they see another side to life, have a chance to express themselves and learn skills that may change their lives.”

As this new charity broadens its support base, they’re looking to officially kick things off at their Launch Party on Saturday, 5 June.  The event will take place from 7:00pm to 11:00pm at the gorgeous Notting Hill venue, 20th Century Theatre on Westbourne Grove (just a few doors West of Portobello Road).  It promises to be a jubilent evening of cocktails and canapes as well as live performances that include the jazzy vocals of  Rebecca Poole, pop/rock dazzlings of Tiger Lilly, and humorous shinanigans of ventriloquist Nina Conti & Monk.  Do book your tickets and support a most meaningful cause that will inspire the children of the world!

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April Guest Post

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

This April-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog post on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

Your London Relocation review of April 2010 covers the biggest sporting event on our street, the London Marathon, a couple of unusual tours,  a wonderful flower market, a sound installation based on the River Thames and a couple of restaurants – of course!

The build up to the marathon is amazing as the streets become full of runners grabbing any time before work or after work and during their lunch time to pound out the miles. Then, the day before, the roads start to be roped off and the preparations around the finish area take over the Mall and St James’s Park.   I was there on the day for several hours as I volunteer for Water Aid to raise awareness of their good work (bringing clean water and sanitation to the millions who still don’t have these essentials www.wateraid.org).  I nearly lost my voice as there were so many brave souls to cheer on and the amazing ones who wear costumes to make it even harder. Over 30,000 runners set off and it’s a long, long way….. They go past some wonderful London sites, including Tower of London, Tower Bridge and Buckingham Palace but I doubt they get to enjoy these! Here are a few photos to give a feel of the day:

There are unusual ways to see London and I decided to have a go on a ‘Duck Tour’, a road and amphibious tour of central London. The ‘vehicles’ were built in 1942 and used in D Day to land troops so are very robust and very well maintained we were assured!  The tour sets off from just by the London Eye and heads through Westminster to the M16 building where we changed over from driver to pilot and splashed down the slipway into the Thames.  The boat rides very low in the water so the experience of the Thames is really unusual. Then back on dry land and we returned to the Eye. Good fun and the jolly guide gives you information on the way as well as encouraging you to shout ‘quack quack’ at passers by!

Feeling a rush of energy I took a cycle tour with City Tours London and the very helpful Nathan who guided me around so I felt safe as a non cyclist. He offers full day tours but for me he did a few hours around the centre of London starting from London Bridge.  It wasn’t too busy and I really enjoyed the experience except for the getting off at the end and suddenly feeling a bit stiff. Photographic evidence supplied!

As the weather warms up and the sun comes out, a trip to a wonderful Sunday market is required to stock the garden and fill the vases. At Columbia Road flower market they have plants as well as flowers and a few streets are closed off and packed out with stalls selling a beautiful bright riot of colour.  The prices are amazingly reasonable and we got jasmine, clematis and huge bunches of flowers. The crowds were tricky to navigate with arms full of plants but the mood was so happy and the pubs and cafes were spilling out on the streets which are also lined with great looking small shops.

Somerset House was hosting a sound installation called River Soundings by Bill Fontana which was really interesting. You get to walk around underground passages not normally open to the public and which are lined with speakers giving you the sounds of the Thames, waves lapping, water gurgling and popping. There are subterranean storage areas with photographs projected onto the old brickwork and you go right under the building at one point. Hard to describe so a few photos to help but well worth a visit – and it’s free!

April was Michelin star month for restaurants with a trip to Quilon, Indian cuisine, Hibiscus and The Ledbury, both French. These three restaurants have 5 stars between them and very nice too. Michelin star places can be very imposing and formal but these were not at all like that so I recommend them – especially the French ones.

Much more was happening in April but that’s probably enough for one blog post!

Sue Hillman

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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March Guest Post

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

This March-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

Your London Relocation review of March 2010 is back to normal if there is such a thing!  A full month in London to tell you about with a short trip to Durham in the north of England thrown in.

The usual weather update to start with.  It’s not been the best March on record with more rain than we’d have liked but we’ve not let that slow us down too much.

London is always surprising and I have a couple of outings to tell you about to illustrate this.  At the London Wetland Centre, just a short bus ride out of the centre, you can spend a day on a photography course surrounded by an amazing array of birds and plants. Founded in 1946 by Sir Peter Scott, a famous naturalist, it is a dedication conservation area for all things that depend on wetlands for survival. You really feel you are in the middle of nowhere and yet can look up and see the buildings of London not so far away. For the bird lovers I gather the big draw is a bittern but just the everyday swans and ducks looked great to me! I’ve attached a few photos to give you the idea and although we went on a quiet day, it was still busy with families enjoying the many activities laid on for them.

Another surprising outing was the Thames Deep Clean. It was the lowest tide for 5 years so the call went out for volunteers to help clean up the exposed river bank in the couple of hours of very low tide. So off I went and filled up about 6 rubbish bags of mostly old cloth but a few plastic and metal items as well, before the river covered it all over again. There were about 60 of us and it felt good to do ones bit if a little chilly standing in wellingtons in the cold mud!  The Thames is quite tidal and at some parts at low tide you get sandy shores even in the centre of the city and street artists jump down to make elaborate sand sculptures. Here’s a photo of us brave river cleaners.

On the theme of volunteering, I joined the world’s longest toilet queue outside Parliament to protest about the millions of people who still do not have access to clean water or safe toilets. We stood with our Gordon Brown masks on to appeal for action on behalf of Water Aid and it made the news – probably thanks to the masks!  The record attempt was aimed at joining the queues taking places all over the world and I think they are still checking that out.

London is always full of music and for me it was classical concert month as we went to see a friend sing in Verdi’s Requiem which was magnificent especially as it is one of the biggest choirs you can see performing so the volume of sound is stunning. The Royal Festival Hall on the South Bank is a great venue and you can see photos of the performers bow and the outside of the hall as dusk was falling.

A second concert was at St Martins-in-the-Field and was a selection of Vivaldi concertos. I only found this by chance as I was given a flyer when visiting the National Gallery but was very pleased to have been. The church is a spectacular venue inside and out as you can see.

Restaurants and bars have been frequented of course!  One interesting one is called The Dock and is a converted warehouse on the Grand Union Canal in Notting Hill. There are canals that run right through the middle of London and used to be the major transport links out to the industrial areas of the mid and north of England. Now they are more for pleasure with great walkways and boats for hire. This warehouse does speciality evenings and we went for Iraqi night and were served a wonderful set meal in this beautiful building – we’ll be back to try out another unusual cuisine very soon I hope. Beforehand we had drinks at ‘Paradise by way of Kensal Green’ which is a great gastropub and gets its unlikely name from a GK Chesterton poem which goes ‘For there is good news yet to hear and fine things to be seen, before we go to Paradise by way of Kensal Green’. I think this is the same one where he tells of the ‘rolling English drunkard’ making the ‘rolling English road’ as an explanation of our somewhat wandering roads compared with the wonderfully straight ones the Romans left us!

No time to tell you about the trip to Cambridge and the great photo exhibitions and the wonderful Kenyan author reading from his latest book. Next time…

Sue

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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February Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

This February-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

Your London Relocation review of February 2010 in London is rather different from usual as I spent most of it in Africa! I was lucky enough to take a big trip by road from Cape Town to Victoria Falls and had a wonderful time seeing amazing scenery, beautiful animals, great sights, blue skies and starry skies and it was hot, hot, hot!

I’ve attached just a few snaps at the end to give you a flavour of southern Africa but will turn my attention to London first and let you know what the remaining week and a bit of February’s been like.

A weather update to start with. Returning from the heat of Africa to the on-going winter in London was a real shock although everyone kept saying that it was much warmer than it had been. Snow was still falling all around London, tho’ not in London itself, so much so that a long awaited visit from a friend in Oxfordshire was cancelled as they were snowed in and that’s only about 30 miles away! Since then we’ve been rained on, daily, so thank goodness for lots of indoor things to do in London!

The weather was kind to us all for the big celebrations for the Chinese New Year as we welcomed the year of the Tiger to London.  The area from Trafalgar Square through to Soho was packed with visitors and residents enjoying the explosion of red lanterns, firecrackers, Chinese music and the massive choice of restaurants packed into that small area. There are also the dancing dragons who visit each business in the area to bring them good luck by eating the salad left hanging for them, accompanied by huge drumming! The Chinese have been in London since the earlier 19th century and the UK has one of largest Chinese populations in Europe – our long association with Hong Kong having a major impact here.   The focus of Chinatown is Gerrard Street and the local council have marked the area with bilingual road signs and you can’t mistake where you are even on a normal day as there is a massive arch and more Chinese restaurants than you could ever get through.  I’ve attached a few photos to give you a flavour of the day and the area – it really is a fun time of year to be there.  London is brilliant in this way, the world comes to us and sometimes a day out can feel like you’ve travelled far away!

One of my favourite shops in London is the Travel Bookshop, made famous by the film Notting Hill and I rarely visit there without buying something as my bookshelves will testify. They have all the guide books and travel literature you could ever want, and maps and CDs. For the movies buffs here’s a little Notting Hill the film info – this shop was the inspiration and you certainly get that feeling when you go in. However, the interior filming took place in a studio and the shots from the inside of the shop onto the street were taken in Portobello Road, round the corner from the Travel Bookshop itself as you can tell when you look out from the actual shop. This doesn’t stop the constant stream of tourists taking their photo in front of the shop (here’s a photo but without me in front of it). As well as selling lovely books they have just started a series of talks from travel writers so we went along to hear Hugh Thomson tell us about his book Tequila Oil Getting Lost in Mexico. It was an interesting and entertaining session so I bought the book (of course), got it signed and found out that tequila oil is a drink to be avoided at all costs for one’s health, the word tequila really is a clue here!

Gallery preview evenings are another joy on a winter’s evening. Muse Gallery on Portobello Road was hosting Justin Piperger’s new work. There were big bold colours, some cartoon works and others which incorporated household items like clocks and tea towel holders! I wasn’t really sure about it all but loved a couple of the big bright pieces and the prices were reasonable but money is a bit too short after the big trip to even start thinking that way….

One more outing to report was to see the Noisettes at the Roundhouse in north London.  The Roundhouse is a fascinating building and derives its name from its shape, a round building which was formerly a railway turntable shed,  somewhere that steam engines could be turned around as they could not run well backwards as happens now.  Over the years it has had many reincarnations as an arts venue. Fingers crossed the current one seems to be working. It’s great for large scale events and I’ve been there to see amazing shows like one where the acrobatic group used the space on the walls and under the roof for their performance, while the audience stood, with some trepidation, in the centre of the floor space in the dark waiting for someone to fall on them! The Noisettes are high energy and fun with a good range styles  but mostly a rocking sound. Their lead singer Shingai Shoniwa is a human dynamo and hard to photograph as she never stands still!  The other photo is of the amazing Roundhouse ceiling.

March’s blog will be back to normal and I’m looking forward to a bumper month.

Here, as promised are just a few photos from Africa:  Cape Town, Namibian sand dunes, elephants, close up to a cheetah, lions and there are so many more…..

Sue

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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January Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

This January-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

If you’d like to see the beautifully festive photos of London that Sue has included with this post, please view them in our Facebook photo album at the following public link: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=12914&id=100000078146572&l=40bf9298fd

Your London Relocation review of January 2010 in London comes a bit early as I’m off to Africa for a few weeks but didn’t want you to miss out and there seems to be plenty to tell you about even in a shortened month.

For those of you who live in places that have snowy, cold winters you’ll think we’ve been making a huge fuss in London about our snow and freezing temperatures. However, it’s the worst spell of wintry weather since 1963 so it’s been a bit of a shock for us all!  Snow laying on the streets and pavements in London is an unusual sight and has made life difficult for many, but on the upside it has been beautiful at times. I’ve posted some photos for you to see Portobello Road empty of its famous market and one of Notting Hill’s beautiful little gardens for which it is well known and one of our local flower stalls.

London is a key city in the art world and at any one time has amazing exhibitions on.  In January I got to see 2 contrasting but equally interesting shows on the South Bank of the river Thames which has a wonderful concentration of galleries, theatres, sights and is a great walk at any time of year.  A short list of what you can find there includes: the London Eye, National Theatre, Hayward Gallery, British Film Institute, Royal Festival Hall, Tate Modern, Globe Theatre and Tower Bridge – phew!  Up to about 10-15 years ago this area was very underdeveloped but local and Millennium funding has transformed it into a must see and must walk destination. It was first cleared as part of the 1951 Festival of Britain which aimed to lift post war spirits, an arts complex was then built in the 60/70s but this century has seen it find its proper place for locals and tourists alike.

The Hayward Gallery was hosting Ed Ruscha: 50 Years of Painting, a fascinating show of power of words and graphics in an American context. The Tate Modern was our second venue, an amazing ex power station which hosts changing exhibitions in the massive space of its turbine hall.  Miroslaw Balka’s huge black box was an intriguing and disturbing experience. You walk into the gaping entrance to a 13 metre high steel box and ease your way to the back into the increasingly black interior. Hands were held and other hands put out in front in case of banging into the rear wall as you really can’t see anything. We eventually met the velvet end and turned round to see that from a different angle the box was flooded with light. The thinking behind it references Polish history of the ghettos and concentration camp trains, which is especially sobering as we saw it in the week that the last of Anne Frank’s helpers has died.  I have attached a photo of the exterior of the Tate Modern as it’s a wonderful building.

Restaurants and pubs to mention this month are La Sauterelle and Langtry’s. La Sauterelle is in the Royal Exchange, which was founded in 1565 by Sir Thomas Gresham as a centre of commerce for the city. This is the third building on the site and was completed in 1844. It is no longer used for the original form of trading but is now an upmarket shopping area and bar and restaurant. The photos show you the impressive exterior and interior of the building which make a wonderful setting for a meal.  The restaurant’s name La Sauterelle is grasshopper in French and comes from the building’s weathervane which incorporates the Gresham family crest. The food is excellent and we took advantage of one of the many January special deals so didn’t have to break the bank (which would have been ironic as the Bank of England is just next door!).

One more restaurant to mention is Langtry’s which was more notable for its history than for its food. Lily Langtry, a well educated vicar’s daughter from the island of Jersey who rose to be a London socialite, Prince’s mistress and actress, lived on the site of the restaurant. It was during her stay here, when the building was the Cadogan Hotel that one night in 1895 in room 118 Oscar Wilde was arrested. History does not tell us whether she was in that night and whether she saw what was happening!  Lily, of course, went on to tour America as an actress and eventually become an American citizen trading in horses and producing wine. Oscar sadly went to prison for 2 years of hard labour and died penniless but also abroad, in France. London is full of amazing history at every turn and even a restaurant visit can leave one full of new information as well as a meal!

I’ll be back to report on February and although only half will be spent in London I’m sure they’ll be plenty to tell you about.

Sue

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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December Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

This December-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

If you’d like to see the beautifully festive photos of London that Sue has included with this post, please view them in our Facebook photo album at the following public link: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=12914&id=100000078146572&l=40bf9298fd

December 2009 has just ended and I’m really looking forward to 2010 in London and all the great things to come.  But before we rush into January, let’s take a moment to look back at December and all the fun we had.

December in London is a beautiful time of year with all the Christmas lights in the streets and some wonderful shop windows. I’ve attached a photo of the ones I voted best of each – the lights are in Carnaby Street (very 1960s peace and love!) and the shop window is at Selfridges. Selfridges, 100 years old this year, is a high end department store on Oxford Street, which claims to be the longest shopping street in the world.  Their Christmas shop windows are famous and people come into town to see them as a team of staff spends all year designing and making the displays, which have a different theme each year. 2009’s theme was pantomime and the photo shows a pantomime dame in full dress.

Panto, as it’s called, is a famous part of the Christmas traditions in Britain and is a comic stage show full of silly jokes and innuendo, outrageous dressing up and bad make up, pantomime dames who are never dames, ridiculous stories such as Aladdin and all round fun for young and old alike.  Key lines in the script are essential to the tradition, such as when the actors can’t see someone approaching and the audiences shouts out ‘behind you’ and a to and fro of ‘oh not it’s not’ with ‘oh yes it is’ plus very loud booing of the villain – well, you have to be there! Often well known actors take part and this year we’ve even had Pamela Anderson from Baywatch on our stages!

Other newer traditions include ice skating rinks, which you can find in some of the loveliest locations in London. These include the Tower of London, Hampton Court Palace and my favourite in the courtyard of Somerset House and I’ve attached a photo so you can see how it looks.  Somerset House used to be government offices including the birth certificates record office but is now a wonderful public space used for ice rinks and concerts.

Carol singing is another important part of London’s Christmas and I visited the Trafalgar Square free open air event next to the famous Christmas tree from Norway. They’ve been sending us a huge tree since 1947 to thank the UK for their assistance during the Second World War and its arrival lets us know that Christmas is well and truly on it’s way. The carol singing was lovely and festive and I’ve attached a photo of the crowd, the tree and the fountains.

Christmas day itself is spent with family and friends and the country shuts down ahead of Boxing Day. Boxing Day is 26th December and there are many and contradictory theories as to why it’s called that but now it’s fully enjoyed as an extra public holiday full of sporting events and the kick off day for the biggest sales in the shops. Many people take the time off work between Christmas and New Year and in London New Year’s Eve is a big event along the Thames with enormous firework displays next to the London Eye. It’s a cold and mad time but public transport going on much later than normal so you do have a chance to get home – at some point the next morning!

We also have big Christmas events such as the Winter Wonderland in Hyde Park.  This was made up of a massive funfair and loads of festive stalls selling presents and festive food and drink, which pulled in large crowds including me and we all had a great time. I avoided the scary rides and really laughed at  the singing moose instead – wish you could have the video as the soft tones of ‘Silent Night’ made our night!

Looking ahead to 2010 we’ve got some great shows coming to town – theatrical, musical and exhibitions and the build up to the Olympics will be getting louder. I’m looking forward to getting to see ‘War Horse’ on the West End stage which everyone is raving about, Van Gogh at the Royal Academy, Art Show to kick off the art world’s year, a new musical event called ‘The Next Big Thing’ and even looking forward to the summer already – Wimbledon, the Proms, Notting Hill Carnival and Kenwood outdoor concerts. So much to come….

All the very best for 2010 to you all!

Sue

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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November Guest Post – Monthly Activities for After You Move to London

Monday, November 30th, 2009

This November-in-review blog post is brought to us all by Sue Hillman of It’s Your London touring company.  Providing custom tours of London tailored to your personal interests, It’s Your London will help you make the most of your time in this phenonemonal city. (For more information, see our previous blog on It’s Your London as well visit www.itsyourlondon.co.uk)

Hello!  This is my first monthly blog for London Relocation and I’m really pleased to be asked to do this.  I’d like to share with you the fun of living in London, give you a taste of life here through what I get up to and give you a bit of background information on the way.  I hope you’ll enjoy reading it whether you are thinking of relocating, on your way here, or already arrived and want to get the most out of London.

In theP1070752 UK, November kicks off with Bonfire Night, also called Guy Fawkes Night.  All over town there are huge firework displays both public and in people’s own gardens and bonfires of all sizes.  The actual night is 5th November and the nearest weekend sees the major displays where Londoners flock in their thousands. The reason for all this is Guy Fawkes himself who, in 1605, was part of a plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament with explosives hidden in the cellars. It became known as the Gunpowder Plot and the plotters wanted to put Catholic rulers on the throne by blowing up the King and the Protestant aristocracy while they were in the Houses of Parliament. But Guy was discovered after a tip off and subsequently killed. Bonfires were lit in celebration of the King’s escape from death and effigies of Guy were burnt on the bonfires and these traditions have continued although the ‘guys’ are seen less than before.  The photo is from a wonderful display at Alexandra Palace in the north of London where firework, music and a fair make for great entertainment.

P1070172November bring us the wonderful London Jazz Festival when major stars come into town for a couple of weeks. You can catch them at the famous Ronnie Scotts, a jazz haunt that’s been in business since 1959, through to very small or new venues. I saw the African Jazz Quintet at the Notting Hill Tabernacle venue and they were great with a brilliant saxophonist whose melodic style married Caribbean styles with more mainstream jazz. I’ve attached a snap of Ronnie Scotts to show its jazziness!

London is amaP1070984zing for one off exhibitions and the stand out one in November was ‘Ghost Forest, From the Tropics to Trafalgar’ in Trafalgar Square. It’s aim was to raise awareness of the dangers of cutting down the rainforests and did this by bringing 10 enormous tree stumps from Ghana and displaying them around the square. The square itself was part of the show as it houses Nelson’s Column, which, at 169 feet, is the same height as a fully grown tree.  The photo shows this wonderful and unusuP1070822al show.

Trafalgar Square is topped by the National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery and the Portrait Gallery was hosting the Beatles to Bowie photographic exhibition this month. It was a mixture of photos, album covers, magazine and newspaper cuttings of all the key stars of that era. It was a must for anyone who remembers these performers as each photograph mentioned a key song so the visitors were all humming their way round. This photo of the poster will make you wish you’d seen it.

There really is so much more to talk about but that’s probably enough for my first blog. I will close with my restaurant of the month which will be a regular feature – the Criterion on Piccadilly Circus. I had a wonderful meal there and slipped in a separate visit to their bar for a fine Cosmopolitan. It is one of the most beautiful dining rooms in London with golden mosaics on the walls and vaulted ceiling.  It’s well worth a visit and is right in the centre of town.

I hope you’ve enjoyed reading this and let me know what you’d like me to talk about in future blogs.

Sue

Sue Hillman

www.itsyourlondon.co.uk

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It’s Your London: Bespoke London Tours

Thursday, November 19th, 2009
Sue Hillman, founder of It's Your London and touring extraordinaire.

Sue Hillman, founder of It's Your London and touring extraordinaire.

No one will dispute the facts that London is 1) huge, and 2) loaded with amazing and diverse experiences to be had.  While this can certainly be listed under the “Pro” (versus “Con”) category where living in or visiting this city is concerned, it can also prove overwhelming.  Whether you are open-minded to anything or very precise in your tastes, we are pleased to recommend to you the touring company, It’s Your London.

With It’s Your London, your tour of the city  can be anything you want it to be–the itinerary is tailor-made to your interests and fancies.  They offer 3 levels of service to suit your level of maintenance–i.e., “Taken Care Of,” “Here to Help,” and “Independent Traveller”–so you can be as led by the hand or left to your own devices as you wish.

It seems there’s no limit to the way you can slice and dice your preferred itinerary–from palaces and museums to gardens and architecture to literary haunts and sports venues, it’s all about what makes you tick and you’d most like to see.  I must say I’m already plotting what tour I’d like to arrange for my family visiting in spring…hmm…my bookish self would love the authors or bookshops tours.

Once you move to London, this would be an ideal, time-efficient way for you to become familiar with your new stomping grounds; it would also make for great entertainment for your out-of-town visitors if you don’t wish to do all the planning yourself or are unable to tour them around by day due to work.  Just like London Relocation Ltd. aims to take all the thought and stress out of your property searching with it’s all-inclusive service, It’s Your London will do so for your recreational touring.  It’s your London now, so make the most of it!

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