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England 2010, Day 6: Kew Gardens, British Library, and British Museum

September 1, 2010

Friday, July 30—Our last full day in England. The days have gone by much too quickly! But I suppose vacation is always like that. Time flies when you’re having fun, right?

This morning I was thrilled to be going to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, usually referred to simply as Kew Gardens. We had seen posters for Kew all over London for the past few days. The gardens are located in the southwest corner of Greater London, the next to last stop on the Underground District line. Kew is massive (300 acres) and has the largest collection of living plants in the world. We only spent a couple hours there, but I could have spent days and days.

 

Me outside the Victoria Gate (main entrance) to Kew

 

 

The Palm House, finished in 1848, the first large-scale structural use of wrought iron

 

 

Lion of England

 

 

Largest plant in the Palm House

 

 

English lavender!

 

Waterlily House:

Plant Families Beds:

Grass Garden:

Rock Garden and Davies Alpine House:

 

Duke’s Garden:

We stopped in the Kew Gift Shop on the way out and I got a lovely bone china mug with English lavender on it and Cotswold lavender hand cream.

We had a quick, cheap lunch at the Tesco Express near the tube station and admired the picturesque area as we ate on nearby bench.

We got back on the tube and headed toward north central London to visit the British Library and British Museum. It’s amazing that both these places are free.

British Library:

 

 

Newton statue

 

 

Ping-pong outside the library

 

The British Library is one of the largest libraries in the world. It holds more items than any other library, and has the second most books, only behind the Library of Congress. Here we saw the “Treasures of the British Library,” including the Gutenburg Bible, many old Biblical manuscripts, the Magna Carta, the original Alice in Wonderland, Jane Austen’s writing desk, Shakespeare’s original Romeo and Juliet, handwritten music by Handel and Beethoven, and many other ancient, original manuscripts.

Next we made our way to the British Museum. However, we took a wrong turn on the way and walked 10 minutes in the wrong direction. Our feet were already sore from all the walking during the past week and already that day, but we managed to laugh at ourselves in our misery. All told we walked about 45 minutes until we reached the museum. On the way we saw University College London (one of the colleges of the University of London) and Barclays Cycle Hire rental docks—a new public transportation option (as of that day) rolled out by the Mayor of London.

We were able to fit this all into one day because the British Museum is open late on Thursday and Friday nights.

 

Famous Reading Room and Great Court

 

 

The Tale of Peter Rabbit translated into hieroglyphics

 

Ancient Egypt:

 

Fist bumping an ancient pharaoh

 

 

 

Red granite sarcophagus from about 2400 BC

 

 

Jeff staring down the ancient cat

 

Ancient Assyria:

 

Famous winged lions that guarded the throne room of Nimrud

 

 

 

Protective spirits from a palace in Ninevah

 

Ancient Greece:

 

The Elgin Marbles – the much fought over pieces of the Athenian Parthenon

 

 

 

Ares, god of war

 

We also saw the Rosetta Stone, but it’s next to impossible to get a good picture of it through the glass and hordes of tourists.

The Museum closed at 8:30 and we went off in search of dinner (more walking!). After at least one more wrong turn (even more walking!), we found Hummus Bros—the best concept for a restaurant, ever.

Hummus is the base and you choose a topping to go on it. Jeff had the chunky beef, and I had chicken with sundried tomatoes.  All main dishes come with warm, whole-wheat pita bread. We also ordered carrot sticks as an extra and their fresh mint and ginger lemonade. I can’t even tell you how good this meal was. Man oh man. The hummus is garlic-free, but you could add a garlic mixture from the small glass pitcher you see next to our drinks below.

The placemats reflected the fun feel of the place with instructions on different methods of eating hummus, and what your preferred method reveals about you.

And, on top of their delicious food and fun atmosphere, their slogan is a pun! Yes, please!

Our feet were killing us and our bellies were full, but we decided to head back toward Soho in search of ice cream. After a couple more wrong turns, we found Scoop near the fish and chips shop from Wednesday and sat (yay!) and enjoyed big cones of fresh, fruity gelato.

Read the introduction to our trip, and about my initial travel; our first evening in the Cotswolds; seeing the English countryside by bicycle; visiting Cotswold villages and local farm animals; exploring Oxford and Blenheim Palace; our first day seeing the sights of London; and seeing Soho, the Tower of London, and The Mousetrap.

7 Comments leave one →
  1. September 1, 2010 8:43 am

    Ah, Tesco. Many a day in Ireland and Singapore would we eat at the grocery store. That would not fly in America, haha.

    Mmm, Ares.

    • September 1, 2010 2:04 pm

      Yeah, Ares was for you. As soon as I saw him, I had to laugh — the way he’s sitting seemed just perfect based on your book. I also saw a statue that was supposed to be Hestia, but they weren’t sure it was her and she was missing her head.

      • Jaimie permalink
        September 1, 2010 3:29 pm

        Yes, he is sitting well.

  2. September 1, 2010 1:21 pm

    Oh my gosh that hummus place sounds AMAZING.

  3. Lynnette permalink
    September 2, 2010 3:33 pm

    Thank you for the lovely pictures of the gardens. I would love to go there!

  4. Alice permalink
    September 3, 2010 8:12 pm

    I think this day would have been my favorite day in London. Gardens…Library…Musem…what could be better?

  5. September 3, 2010 10:18 pm

    what an awesome day! i love botanical gardens…so peaceful. have you been to the missouri one? it’s pretty great. :)

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