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Posts Tagged ‘moving to london tips’

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

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

This August-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)

August in London has one big landmark event in many of our diaries – the Notting Hill Carnival!  It’s 2 days of madness with the loudest of loud sound stages with over 40 of them blasting out, the wildest of wild costumes and the yummiest of yummy Caribbean food.  It’s like being on holiday with the smells and tastes of another land from goat curry, jerk chicken to saltfish and ackee with coconut juice sipped out of coconuts and, of course Red Stripe, the drink of carnival. This marvellous event has been held every year since 1966 and now over a million people crowd into the streets of Notting Hill to have a great party. The parade snakes it way through miles of crowded streets of Notting Hill with steel bands on trucks and hundreds of people following the parade. I love showing people round and had 3 different sets of friends visiting including 2 of my mother’s friends in their late 60s which was a challenge but they were game for everything except the ear splitting sound stage on All Saints Road!  I could show you hundred of photos but am limiting myself to just a few here!

Music is a big theme in August with outdoor concerts in many of London’s great parks. We went for our annual excursion to Kenwood where the picnic concerts have been going for about 30 years – well that how long I’ve been going!  Kenwood House and its park are a wonderful setting for a blanket, good food and wine and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons and the weather lived up to the music with a massive rainstorm just as we were starting out picnic!  You can see the stage by night in this photo alongside 2 shots of the Royal Albert Hall, one inside and one outside, the  home of the BBC Proms.  Each year this hall hosts 76 concerts over a couple of months and has done for the last 116 years – and no, I’ve not been going that long!  The BBC funds this amazing feast of music along with ticket sales and to ensure accessibility there are over a thousand ‘Promming’ tickets for sale each performance for just £5 if you can stand for the performance.

It is a year for anniversaries and this year saw the 70th celebration of the Battle of Britain. Each year is more precious as the heroes get older and fewer can come to the events. I was lucky enough to go to the Cabinet War Rooms where there was a Spitfire on the ground and with a Hurricane on a flypast (too fast for a photo but then speed was so important back then!) and a reading of Churchill’s moving speech in which he said ‘never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few’. Brings tears to the eyes just writing this and it was very emotional on 20th August this year. A group of veterans where there and one, Geoffrey Wellum, who came and talked to the crowd, shook hands, mine included, and was still life and soul of the party. You may have seen the BBC TV programme about him called First Light, the title of his book. Dame Vera Lynn was there too, an extraordinary and gracious 93 year old!

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Weekend Warrior Saturday: Sorting Your Possessions When Packing for a London Move

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

Author:  Colleen

Whether you’re moving to London alone, with a family, as a student, as a professional, with a job, without a job *inhale* *exhale* no matter how you slice-n-dice your particular relocation situation, we all have to at some point pack up and schlep our stuff across the pond.

Today’s packing tip for moving to London is annoying, but simpler if you start thinking ahead.  Basically, start to sort through and divide what will be staying behind and what should be given away.  This way, even if you’re not ready to pack up your necessities because you still need them on a daily basis at home, you can start to clear out the rest.

Every time you’re looking in your closet, try to identify things that you can donate to charity or give away to the lucky friends and family who wear your same size :)   I remember planting a giant box in front of my closet, so, in waves, I’d toss more and more into the box as long as I was standing right there and thinking about it anyway.  If it goes in the box, while that takes up some space, it’s not making a mess.  Do the same for accessories and knick-knacks, and keep revisiting your closets/cabinets with a fresh eye every day or two to see if you can’t part with a little more.

At this stage, it’s wise to also identify what you don’t regularly use, but that you don’t necessarily want to toss.  If you can do without these things for a while, start to pack them up as well and store them in your own storage for the time being or where they’ll reside after you move to London.  In my case, we didn’t want to pay to rent a storage unit, but we were blessed to have family willing to take it on for a few years.  The possessions we left behind are divided between my sister’s and father-in-law’s basements, and some is actually being put to use in our parents’ homes—my mom and dad are enjoying my bookshelves filled with my precious leather-bound book collection, and my father-in-law is actually using our living room set (the leather would fare better in use than sitting in storage left to dry and crack).  This infringement on our loved ones’ space shouldn’t be taken lightly, however, so do offer some sort of compensation or a generous gift.

The more these non-essentials are thinned out, the more clarity with which you’ll be able to look around and assess how to pack up the need-to-haves later.  Giving stuff away is really a good exercise to perform anyway (even if you weren’t moving) for saving space with the added benefit of helping others.  And leaving stuff behind might at first seem painful, but ask yourself honestly when the last time was that you used a certain item and just trust in the truth of “Out of Sight, Out of Mind.”  I’m as sentimental as they come, so if I’ve come to terms with it, so can you!

So in the spirit of your london relocation, put your Sorting Hat on and sort it out!

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Weekend Warrior Sunday: London Leaders

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Author:  Colleen

It’s our second Weekend Warrior weekend, so today I’ll be moving right along through Britain’s history from the early Roman conquest that established Londinium to the time of Anglo-Saxon London.

FYI, an Anglo-Saxon cemetery was evidently discovered in Covent Garden in 2008 that confirmed their presence in London as early as the 5th or 6th century.  Let’s return there…

Though they don’t dwell on the same exact site as Londonium, the Anglo-Saxons settle just outside the Roman walls in what they call Lundenwic (today, the approximate site would be along the Strand from Trafalgar Square to Aldwich!).  These people are known as the Middle Saxons (the namesake for present-day Middlesex), though are eventually absorbed by the kingdom of the East Saxons.  Under King Ethelbert of Kent (the first English king to convert to Christianity), the very first St. Paul’s Cathedral is built in the year 604, albeit of far more modest stature than the one now standing on this site.  Indeed, as it is only made of wood, it already burns down in 675, about two to three decades after Christianity has been established permanently in the kingdom under the reign of King Sigebehrt II.

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Living in London on a Budget

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Author:  Colleen

If you’re moving to London on a budget, my fellow Londonistas and I have been starting to compile some cost-saving ideas over at London Living to help you pinch your pence once living here—this is particularly useful if you’re moving to London with children or as a student or otherwise without a job (which certainly happens in the case of dual-citizens or Tier 1 visa-holders).

I’ve mentioned before how Living Social is an easy way to catch daily updates on good deals throughout London, and lately some friends of mine who are also American expats in London have been giving the heads-up on other resources. Groupon, like Living Social, offers exclusive savings on any number of dining or recreational activities, and morelondon will keep you in the know on free events.  For a growling stomach, don’t feel you need to live on Marmite and toast alone—treat yourself to a dinner out!  Toptable and OpenTable are your go-to resources in that case.

None of us who aren’t originally from London are kidding ourselves—it’s an expensive city.  You’ll be paying through the nose enough on housing in London (but remember the time and money you’ll save on hotel costs if you use our relocation services to find a London flat!), so don’t do the same for what can still be a pleasurable and indulgent lifestyle :)

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