Monday, January 19, 2009

Book? Author? Publishing?

Yeah, I am now an author of a book created and published by me with the help of blurb. It is a photography book, for which I have toiled a bit lately.

You can have a preview of the book and if you like it please do buy a copy.

The title: A bug called shutterbug
Subtitle: Biological eye vs. mechanical lens the war begins...

BOOK DETAILS

http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/542361

Biological Eye vs....
By Monish Matthias



m.I.m

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

the inner beat...

The inner beat…

My journey to few countries in Europe in October 2008.

Europe had always remained a dream destination for me especially after reading Enid Blyton books when I was young, watching several movies filmed in London and Paris. Switzerland was completely out of my vision in the near future, only Roger Federer used to remind me of this place by his fascinating stroke play. I got lucky to come to the UK on an assignment for a short duration and after coming so close to many European countries, it’s a huge disappointment if you don’t get to visit your dream places. With all these thoughts running in my mind I started to search for some good tour agencies to get me going on a trip and that’s when I found out about Star tours, they were having a tour called the panoramic Europe a 5 day trip covering major destinations of Switzerland and France (Paris) and a little bit of Germany and Belgium. Hmm not at all bad for the price they quoted and the biggest bonus was that the Visa arrangement was taken care by them for a certain affordable fee and Indian food served on all days for lunch and dinner, who would want to miss nice Indian food after having cooked and toiled in the kitchen for the past few months trying to conjure some dish and appreciate it myself on a daily basis.
http://www.startours.co.uk/

The days started running quite fast since the day the tour was booked, lists were getting drawn left right and center, things to do, things to take, time to leave, things to book etc…This was a coach tour with around 2500 – 3000 km’s to be done in 5 days pretty much of road burning and seat warming to be done. As the day neared my excitement shot up like a thermometer exposed to the hot Chennai weather. The shopping was all completed a few days before departure, the taxi was booked for 4 am October 1st and rechecked once again much to the drivers irritation.

October 1st (the previous year on October 1st I was in Wayanad, Kerala – beautiful place) (Oct 2nd is still special :)) came rather soon / started early, I woke up 3 am and got ready and waited for the taxi, the driver decided to take revenge for my repeated reminders by coming late by 20 minutes and didn’t he make me feel like a heart patient whose blood pressure was shooting up like a race car speedometer which had just won the pole position. I went and picked up my colleague and his family, Dinakar, Rajeshwari and their daughter Kavya. We reached Wembley Park at around 5:30 and were waiting for the bus with chattering teeth as the morning temperatures are quite stingy and stay low at 3-5 Degrees (nothing in comparison with the -4 degree as I write). The bus came and we settled down and I was busy battling my claustrophobic demons of a closed bus, I get hyper whenever I am caged up and the windows and doors are not in my control…anyways got settled down in a bit and started dreaming of the many places that were to present themselves to me. Another funny incident that happened was, in the morning when I just got out after having a bath, it was so cold that I started shivering for a few minutes and I tried something funny to stop it and I sprained my neck so for the first few days of the trip I was looking like a crane with a sprain.

We arrived at Dover for the ferry crossing to Calais, France; we got into the ship and got settled into seats. We were in for a rough crossing the channel waters were choppy and so the ship decided to play to the tunes of the water and we were tossed up, down and sideways and at this point I imagined the plight of the vegetables tossed about in a fancy salad prepared in restaurants. Many of us made slow, measured trips to the rest room to donate our breakfast by puking, with all our heads dizzy we were left wondering if it was better to be under the heater in office. Finally we spent an extra hour in the ship and reached Calais and our stomachs were literally growling ‘grrrr’ with the horrors of hunger exposed to it. After a 10 minute drive we reached a services area where we were to have the first lunch of the trip. The tour agency has a separate mobile kitchen which cooks on the move and gets to the planned services a few hours before us and serve a nice aromatic hot meal, we had a good vegetarian lunch and started our journey to Belgium, slowly people in the bus started opening up, many were software engineers or related to the IT sector, some were from other sectors as well, many with their parents. We reached Belgium after 3-4 hours of a sedate drive and were late to visit the Mini Europe center so we had to be content with visiting the Atomium center and a little bit of the town and then we moved on to the night stay in a town called Thionville in France, we got there passing through Luxembourg, Belgium. I checked into room number 404 in a hotel called Kyriad, pretty decent room. We were famished by this time and got to the eating center and gorged on a tasty prawn curry etc…Day 1 over!

Ferry Starts - Dover to Calais


Atomium Centre - Belgium



Day 2
When I went to sleep last night I wanted to make sure I wake up on time and don’t get left behind in a strange town, my brains were on a over drive to make sure I don’t over sleep, I was sleeping and I suddenly woke up and looked at my watch and the time was 8:30, shit we were supposed to leave at 7:45, ok they have left without me what do I do, I look out and see that it is still dark, I drink some water and again check my watch, please note this time I look at it the in the right direction and I find out that its only 2:00 am and am safe ufff a sigh of relief and back to bed….(if you look at the watch / clock turned upside down you will notice 8:30 corresponds to 2:00)

Woke up again on time and got ready and had a hearty breakfast of croissants, juice etc and we started from there to travel through Germany and more specifically the black forests and then by evening get into the borders of Switzerland. The highways matched all the good highways found all over Europe and we were travelling peacefully and after a few hours we stopped in the middle of the black forests of Germany and I must accept this place was filled with beauty. Black/brown trees with snow at the top, apparently black forest cake derives its name from this region that’s why the cake is brown in color and has white icing at the top. We then had lunch and then proceeded to a cuckoo clock making factory and we had a tour of the ways with which they make clocks and must say such an ancient art can still make you stand up and take note of the precision that the nimble hands of these craftsmen provide. I was lucky to see one of the earliest clocks ever made dating back to 1640 and after gazing for a few minutes at the over the budget cuckoo clocks which have a delivery for any place in the world and a service center in almost any part of the world. We stopped at Lake Titsee for a photo session and the other motive was to get every one to warm their legs. This was again a beautiful lake in a scenic location. We started from there to get into the Swiss border and we passed through a good part of South Germany which has a good number of maize fields. We were finally stopped at the Swiss border and our guide and driver left us sweating without the engine running for a good 20 minutes which left us all angrily muttering under our breath. We started to Rhine falls and reached soon, we again carried our cameras and then formed the queue to board the boat which takes you to the base of the Rhine falls and you can clamber upwards to a good view point. It was a 5 minute ride to the other side and we reached the vantage point to see the furious & swelled up waters of the Rhine falls flow defiantly not being bothered by the presence of so many tourists or by global warming. Again a few photos and we waited for the boat to return and a few minutes later we were back to the bus and all ready to go the next destination.

We travelled for a while and then stopped for some chow and had some yummy Chicken curry and ordered some Argentinean wine and then we checked into the hotel which was situated in a hill kind of slope and the bus could get us only half way and we had to walk the rest, I moved into the room 419 in the Hotel Terrace in the town of Engelberg. An interesting fact is that it has a population of c. 4,000, of which 600 are of foreign nationality (2007). On the way we had passed through the city Zurich and we saw the river Zurich. The rooms in this hotel were like a playground wide, spacious and comfortable. End of day 2
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engelberg

Another Pose ...hmm - Germany AutoBahn's


In the middle of the Black Forests - Germany


Cuckoo Clocks


Rhine Falls - Switzerland


Rhine Falls - closer



Day 3

No midnight adventures like the previous night woke up and rubbed my eyes repeatedly as I was awestruck by the beauty that was seen from the window. The snow had just started that day for this season and the greenery from the previous season was still intact giving a combination of potent green and white art. Today was the big day as we were planning to go to the peak of mount Titlis a good 10000 feet high. Had a hearty continental breakfast and wore my thermals and got prepared for meeting the grail. After a 5 minute ride by bus we were at the base of the mount Titlis, where we were supposed to take the cable car to the peak. The last part of cable car way leads above the glacier Klein Titlis, and you could visit a glacier cave. Also this is where the world's first revolving cable car is present. With all this information we started the first cable car ride, we had to change at 2 stations and take 3 cable cars in total to reach the top of 3238 meters. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titlis The views were spellbinding, the snow on the tips of the trees as seen from the first cable car gave way to trees almost covered completely with snow, and the change at the second station was smooth. We saw many cows or yaks in the high altitude braving the cold and munching away what ever could be seen above the snow cover. The last stage with the revolving cable car was fantastic, standing at one place you get to see all sides as the floor rotates slowly (there is a revolving restaurant in Chennai - Carnival Heights Revolving Restaurant). It was something which I had never seen, whiteness as pure as milk spread over the entire distance viewable by my eyes. We reached the top and the temperature was hovering between -11 to -15 degree temperature and I really pitied the cable car operator and the staff working at that height. The world’s highest bar was present there and we had a glimpse of the place, we went into the glacier cave and then started warming up for the real fun – the real glacier. We had to rent shoes and we walked like explorers on the poles visualizing a saga of discoveries and wandering. It was white and white and white and snow flakes showering us, I have never felt this good in the presence of water or it’s by products. I was playing there for about 30 minutes, drenching my camera in the process and then finally got back under human conditions. We started the ride back down and we were treated to denser snow fall. We then left Engelberg and proceeded to the town of Luzern / Lucerne. Due to its location on the shore of Lake Lucerne within sight of Mount Pilatus and Rigi in the Swiss Alps, Lucerne is traditionally considered as a good tourist destination. One of the city's famous landmarks is Chapel Bridge (Kapellbrücke), a wooden bridge first built in the 14th century.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucerne
We visited the Bridge and the Lion Monument. Bertel Thorvaldsen's famous carving of a dying lion (the Lion Monument) is found in a small park just off Lowenplatz. The carving commemorates the hundreds of Swiss Guards who were massacred in 1792 during the French Revolution, when the mob stormed the Tuileries Palace in Paris.
After some souvenir shopping for Swiss knives in Swiss, we then moved to Interlaken http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlaken .
This is where the world famous the Jungfrau peak (4158m) and the nearby Jungfraujoch railway station (3450m) is present. I must accept that this is one of the most beautiful towns (in terms of scenic beauty) I have ever visited. Blue waters, beautiful trees, snow peaks, greenery in all sides, I could go on and on. We saw some adventure sports like Para gliding etc being practiced. We were roaming for an hour far away from the town center to see the real beauty of this small town and then crawled back to the town center to catch a look of the various shops present. We then started back to Engelberg and the entire bus members were playing dumb charades and antakshari – reminded me of school and college days, what I won’t give to return back to school days but of course minus the exams, punishment and my chemistry teacher. We had a nice Indian dinner with Italian wine and got back into the hotel packed and got ready for a few hours of sleep in Switzerland.
[Few things learnt in this trip] King / Emperor – Guess what’s the difference between a King and an Emperor? While many say a king is one who rules a kingdom and an Emperor is one who rules an empire. While that is partially right the main difference is King is usually elected by hereditary right, while an Emperor has won a war and taken over the ruler ship.

From the cable car - Engelberg


Snow tipped trees

Frozen


Me at the peak of Mt Titlis > 10,000 feet (-11 degrees)


View from the base of the cable cars


Me at Engelberg


The view near the Interlaken railway Station


Scenic Beauty - Interlaken


Adventure Sports at Interlaken


Beauty after life


Lion Monument - Luzern


Day 4

Got up, got ready, had breakfast, moved luggage to the bus. Today was the longest drive from Switzerland to Paris – they were hoping to make it less than 7 hours. Pretty boring, was looking out of the window most of time, reading the book Zillij by Ameena Hussein a Sri Lankan author. My best savior was the kid Kavya; she used to amuse me with her knowledge, playfulness, energy, innocence and what not…time used to fly while playing with her. We stopped at a service for lunch and then again resumed my sleep. I have a vague habit, when I am in any moving object I get the notion that someone is rocking me to sleep and I blissfully doze. As we got closer to Paris everyone started bickering over every tall building, every telephone / TV tower to be the Eiffel Tower and we did get a proper view when we got off for the very important cruise on the River Seine. The 2 hour cruise starts almost at the foot of the Eiffel Tower and moves on to cover almost most of the cities important places and goes under all the important bridges.

We were screaming and running around the boat looking at different scenes of the French life around us. We finally got off and were treated to good scenes of the sunset and the Eiffel Tower standing tall giving an additional aura to the great sunset. We got back to the Novotis hotel had a wash and a good chicken roast dinner and were off at 10 PM. where??? For a night tour of Paris, Paris the city of lights in night is bound to impress the tourist in you and not the environmentalist in you. Every building small or big, every lane crowded or empty was dazzling with lights. I heard that the EU was moving a ban on lighting of many building and the Eiffel Tower in the night after a certain time as several hundred thousands of Euros are spent every day on the electricity charges. We witnessed the Eiffel Tower in full glory in blue lights.
The places that we got to see during the boat cruise and during the night tour are the Opera house, the Arc of Triumph, Concorde Square, Parliament buildings, Sean de alleys (the magnetic street with people at all times), the tunnel where Diana met her sad end, the back entrance of the hotel from where Diana left, Old England hotel (the place where Lakshmi Mittal has one of the worlds most expensive marriage of his daughter), Louvre museum, Notre Dame, the royal hospital built with gold and a few of more buildings.

Paris the eternal city of lights where people don’t sleep seems so true only when you are standing right there with them. At 23:00 – 1:30 in the night you see all the bars, eat outs are having long queues for people getting in, the streets are crowded like in India with party goers, people just walking around meeting friends and what not…The true spirit of Paris.
[Few things learnt in this trip] Roads – If you see the roads and by lanes of Paris you would see that the structures are perfect and a small little curve would be accentuated well by the buildings in that curve, when you look ahead for a fair distance the stretch would be visible with no blind turns. Napoleon III took an active interest in the architecture and construction and was very strict in enforcing good quality.
http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/architecture/Haussmanns-Architectural-Paris.html
And we returned by 1:30 AM early morning, with fluttering eye lids and memories of vivid lights, busy streets of Paris, wonderful lanes, rash drivers, beautiful architecture, people full of energy and life.


[Few things learnt in this trip] Church / Cathedral / Chapel / Basilica / Abbey– What is the difference?

A cathedral is the chief church of a diocese in which the bishop has his throne.

Basilica has an architectural sense (St Peters Basilica, Vatican City, Rome). The pope can declare a particular church as a basilica.

"Chapel" - A place of worship that has its own altar. The word itself is associated with the idea of relics, since it is drawn from the idea that St. Martin divided his cape (chapelle) in half and left half with a beggar.

"Church" A place for public (especially Christian) worship.

Abbey - A church associated with a monastery or convent.

The first encounter - Paris


The majestic bridges - Paris


Notre Dame Cathedral


Standing Tall



Sunset


Lights on - Showtime


Opera House


Day 5

Yes 4 days of my wonderful vacation have vanished, have made stronger vows of returning back to Paris on my own. We got ready and went to the magnificent structure of the Eiffel tower, we were going to conquer the tower and get to the topmost floor of the structure. The tower is the icon of Paris, it is an iron structure, the tallest standing building of Paris, the most visited paid monument in the world, 1,063 ft high. It was built for a world fair to be demolished later but as it supported and worked as a good communication tower it was left to stand. They use 50 -60 tonne’s of paint every year to keep the structure rust free. The top of the tower moves up to 7 cm’s when there is a heavy wind blowing. Upon the Nazi occupation of Paris in 1940, the lift cables were cut by the French so that Adolf Hitler would have to climb the steps to the summit. When visiting Paris, Hitler chose to stay on the ground. It was said that Hitler conquered France, but did not conquer the Eiffel Tower. Another interesting story was that novelist Guy de Maupassant — who claimed to hate the tower — supposedly ate lunch in the Tower's restaurant every day. When asked why, he answered that it was the one place in Paris where one could not see the structure.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiffel_Tower

[Few things learnt in this trip] Picnic – The origin of picnic is from a French word pique-nique- for more details click here http://word-powers.blogspot.com/2007/08/word-powers-friday-fiesta.html

Coming to day 5 we stood at the base of the tower clicking away pictures, and to our sorrow we discovered the top most floor was closed due to the reason that the wind was so strong up there and could blow people off. So we had to contend ourselves with a visit to the second highest floor. We had to squeeze ourselves in an ancient OTIS lift which to my discomfort has been there from the past century. I was praying that the lift doesn’t decide in my presence to make a call to the mechanics. Hopefully we got up in quick time and had great views of the city and that’s when you realize that the Paris is indeed built with great precision and planned well – the roads and lanes are well cut and the city presents itself as being very organized. After clicking away to glory to the discomfort to my S3 IS camera we started our descent via the great steps of the tower 340 steps to the second level and 328 steps to the first level. We then went around the city center and then started our journey back home after 5 days of touring places, we got back to Calais and crossed the ocean which was in a better mood and did make us run to the rest room often. We reached East Ham at 9:30 and caught a series of tube, train and taxi and got home by 12:30 – 1:00 to end a fantastic, fascinating and fantabulous holiday. Though I had to wake up at 6:00 the next day and get to office by 8:00 and make up for my absence, nothing can beat the effort and the trip. Have a look at the pictures below.
The Main Foundation


The Welled Planned City of Paris - 1


The Welled Planned City of Paris - 2


The View from the first level of Eiffel



For more pictures - http://www.flickr.com/photos/minmaxmim/


m.I.m

Friday, January 02, 2009

Tour London Guide - Things to do in London and nearby




Things to do in London and nearby, places to visit in London. A ready guide prepared for you, enjoy!

London
the city which brings a sparkle to many an eye.

As Angela Carter said - Cities have sexes: London is a man, Paris a woman, and New York a well-adjusted transsexual.
Or as William Shakespeare said Would I were in an alehouse in London. I would give all my fame for a pot of ale, and safety.
Or again as William Shakespeare said I hope to see London once ere I die.

How many of us have grown up singing the nursery rhyme
London Bridge is falling down, Falling down, Falling down. London Bridge is falling down, My fair lady.
….

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Bridge_is_Falling_Down

How many of us from India have wondered where the Kohinoor diamond has disappeared?

The rhyme was created to mark the difficulty faced in bridging the two sides of the River Thames and the bridge which collapsed which being built.

So if you happen to be in the city London which had the world’s busiest airport – Heathrow which handles the largest international traffic, what would you do? Yes you would roam and visit some historic places. I will try to give rough sketch of what to do in London, what to avoid or postpone as the last priority.

You can start your tour point from the London Waterloo railway station [$1$], a station which has existed from 1848 the largest station in the UK in terms of number of platforms and greatest floor area. The station has appeared in the movie The Bourne Ultimatum, starring Matt Damon, and Bollywood film Jhoom Barabar Jhoom was filmed here as well.

As you walk out of the station and in a few minutes you are treated to the London Eye [$2$], the largest Ferris wheel in Europe and ranks among the top three of the world. It can be accessed from the Westminster underground station as well.
As Richard Rogers says
The Eye has done for London what the Eiffel Tower did for Paris, which is to give it a symbol and to let people climb above the city and look back down on it. Not just specialists or rich people, but everybody. That's the beauty of it: it is public and accessible, and it is in a great position at the heart of London.
http://www.londoneye.com/

[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer]
The views from the top of the London Eye are just incredible; as you won’t miss entering the floors of the Eiffel tower you should miss this.
London Eye


View For top

And as you walk further down you are greeted to the London Aquarium [$3$] and this can be given a miss, this doesn’t match anywhere close to the Singapore aquarium. Though this is Europe’s largest indoor aquarium http://www.londonaquarium.co.uk/
[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer]

London Aquarium

There is a scary experience place right next to the aquarium and I haven’t been there, the other alternative for this is the London Dungeon [$4$] where they try to scare you and make you get worried, but well worth the price and good fun, but make sure you are not alone. This can be accessed from the Tower bridge station http://www.thedungeons.com/

London Dungeon


As you walk along you begin to see Big Ben building [$5$] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ben Big Ben is the nickname for the great bell of the clock in the clock tower of the Palace of Westminster. The clock is the world's largest four-faced, chiming clock ant the third largest free-standing clock tower in the world.

Big Ben


A complete View


You walk around the Big Ben and you come across the Parliament Square buildings known as the palace of Westminster [$6$]. A few rooms were damaged in the great fire of 1834 and few rooms were damaged during the World War 2 during a bombing raid.
http://www.parliament.uk/about/visiting.cfm

Parliament Square


You can trace your path back a few meters back and walk to your left / right to the Westminster Abbey [$7$] Benedictine monks first came to this abbey in the middle of the tenth century, establishing a tradition of daily worship. The Abbey has been the coronation church since 1066 and is the final resting place of seventeen monarchs.
http://www.westminster-abbey.org/

Westminister Abbey



Next to the church is the St Margaret’s church [$8$]
http://www.westminster-abbey.org/st-margarets/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Margaret%27s,_Westminster

You can now proceed to Charring Cross from the Waterloo tube station or the Westminster tube station to visit Trafalgar square [$9$] its trademark is Nelson's Column which stands in the centre and the four lion statues that guard the column. Statues and sculptures are on display in the square, including a fourth plinth displaying changing pieces of contemporary art, and it is a site of political demonstrations.
The name commemorates the Battle of Trafalgar (1805), a British naval victory of the Napoleonic Wars. The original name was to have been "King William the Fourth's Square", but George Ledwell Taylor suggested the name "Trafalgar Square".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trafalgar_Square

Trafalgar Square


As you walk further down the road you will enter the Buckingham Palace area and you can see the Buckingham Palace [$10$] at the end of the road. The change of guard [$11$] happens often and is worth to watch for few, though remember to get there early else your view won’t be too good. http://www.changing-the-guard.com/

Palace and the gates

Palace Square


Change of Guard


Now as you walk back you can enter the St James Park, Green Park [$12$] etc for a nice view of water birds, squirrels and nice greenery.
http://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/green_park/
http://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/st_james_park/

Royal Parks


Birds at the parks


Now if you hit lunch time Little Frankie’s [$13$] at the Trafalgar square is a good place to have some Italian and American dishes.

Now get to Charring cross station and take the tube to Baker Street for a visit of Madame Tussauds [$14$] - the famous wax museum in London with branches in a number of major cities. It was set up by wax sculptor Marie Tussaud.
http://www.madametussauds.com/London/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madame_Tussauds
[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer]

Salman Khan at Madam Tussauds


As you walk back to the Baker Street station you can see the Statue of Sherlock Holmes – the famous fictional detective as his official address is 221 B Baker Street [$15$] an address that does not actually exist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baker_Street

Sherlock Holmes in Baker Street


You can take the tube and get to BlackFriars station or London Bridge and walk down to the Shakespeare Globe theatre [$16$] Origin of Box Office – In earlier centuries the theatres didn’t have payment systems or ticket counters, there used to be a box where the people coming in would throw money and walk in to watch the play / show, as the collection gathered in the box, the box would be taken around to all the floors and then finally to a room / office room where it was stored, counted and kept in the safe. This bought the name as box office.
[Information gathered at Shakespeare’s Globe theatre tour]
http://www.shakespeares-globe.org/
[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer]

Shakespeare's Globe theatre



Next you can walk down to the Tate Modern Art Gallery [$17$] next block, entrance is free and the art exhibits are as abstract as you can ever see.
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/

Tate Modern Art Gallery


You can cross the river by walking on top of the millennium bridge - the London Millennium Footbridge [$18$] is a pedestrian-only steel suspension bridge crossing the River Thames. Londoners nicknamed the bridge the Wobbly Bridge after crowds of pedestrians felt an unexpected swaying motion on the first two days after the bridge opened.

The southern end of the bridge is near Globe Theatre, the Bankside Gallery and Tate Modern, the north end next to the City of London School below St Paul's Cathedral. The bridge alignment is such that a clear view of St Paul's south facade is presented from across the river, framed by the bridge supports, thus providing a scenic view of the cathedral.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium_Bridge_(London)

Millennium bridge (Black Friars bridge in the back ground)


The view from the Millennium bridge


As you walk on the bridge you can see the Tower Bridge of London [$19$] to your right, Black Friars Bridge [$20$] to your right, St Paul’s Cathedral [$21$] directly in front.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfriars_Bridge

http://www.towerbridge.org.uk/TowerBridge/English
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_Bridge

St Paul’s Cathedral [$21$] is the Anglican cathedral on Ludgate Hill and the seat of the Bishop of London. Dates back to the 17th century. The cathedral sits on the edge of London's oldest region, the City, which originated as a Roman trading post along the edge of the River Thames. The cathedral is one of London's most visited sites.

The nearest London Underground station is St. Paul's.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Paul%27s_Cathedral
http://www.stpauls.co.uk/

St Paul’s Cathedral


Info: If you have taken a day travel card – you will have unlimited train, tube and bus usage plus if you have taken the day travel card from a south western train station you can get the two for one offers as well.

You can take the tube or bus and proceed to Piccadilly Circus [$22$] and roam around and walk towards Oxford Street [$23$], Bond Street [$24$] – these are the main shopping areas of London.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piccadilly_Circus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Street
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bond_Street

Shopping streets


For cricket buffs you can take a tour of the Mecca of cricket – The Lords cricket ground [$25$] – there are only few tour timings in a day - http://www.lords.org

Lords cricket ground


For other important palaces you can visit the South Kensington Palace [$26$]
http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page563.asp
[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer]

Another famous Square is the Leicester Square [$27$] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leicester_Square

For those who like going on boat rides there is a nice cruise from Waterloo to Greenwich passing through London Bridge [$28$], Tower Bridge of London, Tower Palace [$29$], Greenwich – this ride has a live commentary and is well worth the money.
http://www.citycruises.com/
[If you use south west trains for any part of your journey you have a two for one ticket offer] {33% percent off if you have a travel card}

Tower Bridge of London


Tower Bridge of London (in action)

London Bridge


Tower Palace



Greenwich [$30$] has many antiques selling markets and is a good place to roam about, it is best known for its maritime history and as giving its name to the Greenwich Meridian (0° longitude) and Greenwich Mean Time. You can go and visit the zero degree line [$31$] and stand in the West and East hemisphere at the same time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwich

Royal Observatory

Greenwich Station

Zero Degree line


British Museum [$32$] is a must for the museum lovers -
http://www.britishmuseum.org/


Kew Gardens & the Treetop walkway[$33$] - its nice to walk in a garden among trees, but how nice would it be to walk among trees at the height of trees...
http://apps.kew.org/trees/
http://www.kew.org/visitor/visitkew.html

London, Europe - art flourishes, theater [$34$] floors you, the latest I have been to was a pantomime - Aladdin...for tickets (good deals)
http://www.lastminute.com/site/entertainment/theatre/
http://www.southwesttrains.co.uk/SWTrains/Destinations/specialoffers/_2for1.htm
http://www.ambassadortickets.com/New-Victoria-Theatre

Bird lovers can visit the Wet Land Center in Barnes, London [$35$]
- two for one offer applies
http://www.wwt.org.uk
Twins

Shopping freaks can visit the Harrods Mall and get their bank accounts cleared of the excesses, London [$36$] - it has 11000 bulbs lighting up the outer walls...
http://www.harrods.com/harrodsstore/
- two for one offer applies

A really recommended Indian /Sri Lankan eat out in Wembley is the Gana Cafe, mind boggling food, [$37$]
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/10/england-srilanka-connection.html

Other places to visit within 1-2 hours of drive / train are
1) Oxfordshire
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/11/windsor-castle-and-oxford.html
2) Bath Spa
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/09/bath-spa-lucky.html
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/12/photograph-guide.html
3) Brighton
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/10/brighton-day-trip-boon.html
4) Bournemouth
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/09/bournemouth-good-entertainer.html
5) Portsmouth harbor
6) Isle of Wight
7) Windsor Castle
http://minmaxmim.blogspot.com/2008/11/windsor-castle-and-oxford.html

Hope you liked reading this guide. Contact me for any help...

m.I.m