If London’s architectural design gets a big “ahhhh!” from the tourist you must see the wonderful parks of London. London is the largest urban area of England and often called the “The Green City”. The first thing that I got engrossed with in every place I travel is the park and gardens the city accommodates. Architecture and historical sites came second to this. I was so glad that London offered so many beautiful gardens for locals and visitors to see.
With London’s temperate climate you will really like the gardens that London showcases.
Let us visit the garden and parks inside the London’s centre.
• Royal Parks of Hyde Park It is one of the Royal Parks of London and one of the largest garden parks in central London England. It is 350 acres and opens until midnight. The grand entrance of this park was made from the designs of Decimus Burton. The size of the whole entrance is about 107 ft. There are several London Underground stations located on or near Hyde Park like the Hyde Park Corner and Knightsbridge, etc.
• Kensington Gardens It is one of the Royal Parks in London. It was formerly the private gardens of Kensington Palace. It is in 275 acres land and located west of Hyde Park. This is the park mentioned in the story Peter Pan of J.M. Barrie. The character Peter Pan and the author of the book were both honored in this park thus an iconic statue of Peter Pan is located in this park.
• Green Park Its name indeed gives justice to its surrounding. Green Park is blanketed with green scenery during the spring season and covering an area of approximately 53 acres. Compared to other parks in London, Green Park has no fountain or statue but made merely of beautiful and wonderful wooded meadows. It is also one of the Royal Gardens.
• St. James’s Park is the oldest park among the Royal Park in London. This park is named after a leper hospital located in the southernmost part of St. James place. This park is dedicated to St. James the Less.
These parks are only a few of the so many parks in London like the Bushy Park, Greenwich Park, Richmond Parks and the rest. Experience the magnetic appeal of these parks in London.
ONE of the London-based idols that I love is that fictional character created by Eidos, Lara Croft. And one of the most memorable scenes in a Lara Croft movie that I love in the movie is the gliding that Lara Croft did in Hong Kong with her love interest in the film. Here in London where I am staying all the way through Valentines weekend with my lovely Chinese-Spanish wife Leizl, there are no opportunities for gliding here but there is one close to that – bungee jumping. There’s actually an exclusive members only club here for bungee jumpers – the aptly-named UK Bungee Club but on occasions such as Valentines and New Year’s, the UK Bungee Club is offering its doors to tourists, especially foreign ones. And certainly I am a tourist since my wife and I came all the way from Salamanca.
I can hardly wait to be bungee jumping here in London during Valentines. It’s good already at 99 pounds per couple and that’s already inclusive of a bottle of champagne. Of course, you don’t litter the champagne over the air in London; you wait till both of you settle back to the ground. But if bungee jumping is not enough for you, then there is also a skydiving event here in London by February 14 or Valentines Day but this event is mostly for single ladies only who don’t have romantic partners yet. The skydiving event is held in Swindon just outside London and your tandem instructor is a very handsome hunk just like the knights of old in King Arthur’s round table. So ladies, if you don’t have a date yet, skydiving with a guy as handsome as Orlando Bloom even for just less than five minutes is a superb experience already. Rate is as good as 200 pounds per person.
Then by February 15, my wife and I will be attending the London premiere of The Eye starring Jessica Alba. I have always been rooting for Jessica Alba since she was still 14 in the Hollywood television series Flipper. I was in my sophomore year in college at Universidad de Madrid then, taking up a degree in journalism. I have already seen Jessica Alba live and in person at the London Eye during the premiere of Rise of the Silver Surfer in 2006 but this time, I want to see her again on how she looks when she’s pregnant. I have heard that she looked great in a maternity gown during the Technical Oscars’ night held an evening before the Grammy Awards. Besides, my wife Leizl loves horror movies and this is like hitting two birds in one stone.
Also on February 15, Jennifer Love Hewitt (the star of The Ghost Whisperer) will have a semi-radio concert-cum-interview at BBC Radio 3 and because my cousin Guillermo is a technician at BBC Radio 3, he has already arranged of seats for us inside the radio station so we can watch Jennifer Love Hewitt singing. Jeez, this Valentines will really be a memorable one for my wife Leizl and I even though we don’t have any kids yet.
WHILE Chinese celebrations of the Year of the Earth Rat are in full swing, it may be cool to visit London’s Chinatown and contemplate there while you are here on a holiday in London. London has lots of things to offer and we can see parts of London based from movies released in January. In the movie National Treasure: Book of Secrets, we saw that the thugs in the movie played by Ed Harris retrieved an artifact dumped into River Thames by Nicolas Cage. Then in Eastern Promises, a Russian thug drops a dead body into the same river. Years back, I could recall London being in an authoritarian state in V for Vendetta. Of course, this is certainly not true in the real London life as there has been no body dumped there in recent memory unless you count the Jack the Ripper case in the 19th century which was a very long time ago. Of course, Jack the Ripper’s story was sort of immortalized in the Johnny Depp-headlined film From Hell. The real River Thames which extends far out onto suburbian London features rowing and other water sports.
But right now, since it is Chinese New Year, I will tour you into one of the exotic parts of London – its own Chinatown. 2008 is certainly a lucky year because three of the digits are round; meaning luck is infinite. And the number “8” even feature double zeros. Sadly, this has not been the fate portrayed upon British Chinese as far as Hollywood movies are concerned. We in Britain must erase that concept portrayed by Hollywood. British Chinese are portrayed there as human smugglers where Chinese just wash up on our beaches here in England. That certainly is not true, right? In fact, when you visit Chinatown in Soho, you can see that the Chinese are very industrious. That is one of the Oriental legacies that we inherit from them – they can live well even through the worst of times.
The influence of the Chinese in London culture is so much alive that even Mayor Ken Livingstone himself graced the 2008 Chinese New Year celebrations here yesterday. The parade cruised the major thoroughfares of the whole Soho district, including Shaftesbury Avenue, Charing Cross Road and the Strand. In Trafalgar Square, there was a concert featuring British Chinese artists throughout the night which rocked the whole area even until dawn.
There is one connection between China and London in this year’s celebration. Beijing, which is the capital of China, is the host of the 2008 Summer Olympics which will be undergone later this year. The next host of the Olympics by 2012 will be London of course. There will be a Chinese film festival featuring movies by filmmakers from Beijing, Hong Kong and Taipei. There will be visiting acrobats and music artists from Beijing who will be holding concerts not just during New Year’s Day itself but throughout February and on to the summer while Olympics is going on in Beijing.