Showing posts with label North London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North London. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Hampstead Heath


Gorgeous Hampstead Heath snapped by me



MY FAVOURITE. AND EVERYONE ELSE'S

I love Hampstead Heath. There, I said it. 

I know I'm supposed to be more original than that but I can't help it. The Heath is so big and diverse that you can never get bored exploring it It has everything: woodlands, fields, a bog, a pergola, hills, bathing ponds, regular ponds, playgrounds, Tennis courts, running tracks and last but not least the manor Kenwood House.






So far I've been too absorbed  with the outdoors to visit Kenwood House properly but it operates a nice café  and I'm told it hosts English Heritage Picnic Concerts in summer. Don't know if I feel the need to watch Tom Jones, Gypsy Kings or Liza Minelli in the park but live music in parks are usually a great combination.

Kenwood House, www.wikipedia.org
I don't just come for Parliament Hill and the Hampstead landscapes. The delightful (some might say 'cutesy, but whatever') Hampstead and Belsize villages also draw me back on a regular basis as well as the fact that you can always find a place to wander undisturbed, picnic or in my case get completely lost on the Heath.




Clearing so pretty I had to run to straight to it after taking this photo


Hampstead branches... trying to catch the red flowers.


View of London from Parliament Hill on a cloudy day - hopefully, you're encouraged to go see what it looks like up close.


Apparently there is a Parliament Hill Café in the area next to the Heath's bandstand. I have yet to visit it. 
       
Abandoned coffees (and a scone!) at the Burgh House, local history museum and café in Hampstead Village
 POLISHED NORTHERN NEIGHBOURHOODS


I usually have coffee around Hampstead High Street before going up to Parliament Hill or the opposite direction up Heath Street to the Whitestone Pond. 


Both walks are lovely and they take you past some really pretty houses before getting to the park. As corny as it is, I really enjoy the polished look and feel of the Hampstead neighbourhood. I've had some trouble catching its charm in photos though...




Sign and police officer (?) in Downtown Hampstead




Blue and Red cars in Downtown Hampstead


Hampstead side street 


KEATS, ORWELL AND FREUD


On your way to Parliament Hill you might stop by Keats House on Keats Grove. The poet lived here from 1818 to 1820 and reportedly wrote 'Ode to a Nightingale' under the plum tree in the garden. 


Fittingly, the next-door neighbour is the Heath Public Library.



On my way to Keats House...
  
Not Keats's House but I had an urge to go in and find out whose... 
   
At the very top of Parliament Hill you'll find this plaque:


www.wikipedia.org
... on this house, no. 77:


http://www.flickr.com/photos/25127834@N07/3153411847/
This house is actually still a private home but like Keats House you can visit the Freud Museum at no. 20 Marsefield Gardens nearby. I've only been past once and unfortunately the museum was closed. It looks like this:


The Freud Museum in Hampstead, www.wikipedia.org 

PONDS AND WOODLANDS

This is just to try to give different impressions of the Heath, what I've photographed here is mainly open woodland at different occasions:

Around Parliament Hill

Up Heath Street to Whitestone Pond...



And into the forest...

Sun in the treetop



Not my best tree-shot 

Even the public restrooms look like something out of a German folktale.


The ladies in Hampstead Heath



The Three Graces on the Heath, Helena is photographing.

My next quest will be to find the 'secret' Pergola, it looks absolutely beautiful. It could take a while, though, since maps are rare on the Heath.... However, wandering aimlessly in parks is what this blog is all about so I'll embrace the challenge. I honestly feel more comfortable 'losing myself' in a park than any other place in London. See the 'about section' if you still fancy a map.

I'll be sure to let you know when I have some personal shots of the pergola, but until then these will have to do: 

Pergola: A raised, covered walkway, www.wikipedia.org


Another shot of the Thomas Hayton Mawson Pergola at Hampstead Heath, www.rawd.edu.net 

FIND OUT ABOUT...

Closest tube: Hampstead, Hampstead Heath

Most of Hampstead Heath is accessible 24 hours a day, see any variations under visitor information. 







Saturday, February 19, 2011

Waterlow Park

Waterlow Park entrance

'GARDEN FOR THE GARDENLESS'

I wandered into Waterlow Park after a visit to Highgate Cemetery, which is its closest neighbour to on two sides. 


As much as I love the cemetery it can become a bit overwhelming, even gloomy, if you spend a whole day walking about between the graves so Waterlow Park with it ponds, lawns and open landscape came as a welcome change.


Waterlow might not be as spectacular but it is lovely it its own right and there were plenty of people around even if the weather was still quite cold and grey. 








The park was bequeathed to the public as garden for the gardenless in 1889 by Sir Sydney Waterlow, who also used to own Lauderdale House inside the park.

Lauderdale House with a sundial in front

Today. Lauderdale house is an arts and education centre that operates a café as well. When I stopped by they had Roxana Halls' 'Tingle-Tangle and Other Tales' on, an exhibition examining cabaret through various media: film, painting, photography, even cabaret set pieces. 


Check out her website in the 'about'-section to see examples from this cool show and learn more about the artist. 


Unfortunately, I was in a hurry on this particular day, but I'm definitely keeping an eye out for Roxana Halls in the future.




Last stanza of 'The Garden' on a bronze plaque in Waterlow Park




As I left I took a look at the sundial and discovered that there was a quote from Andrew Marvell's 'The Garden' beside it on a plague. This sent my mind wondering... it was the first poem I had to analyse as an English student at Copenhagen back in 2005. What a strange coincidence


The poet is thought to have lived in a cottage once within the park. It is no longer there, I looked quite extensively for it...




Ducks in the pond

I inspected the terraced garden, guarded by large stone eagles, close to Lauderdale House and walked along the middle pond, which as the name suggests, is in the centre of the park.  

Copper roof on the dome of St. Joseph's Church.
Before I left I passed the kitchen gardens in one corner of the park, but in February there was of course not much to see. Perhaps it's time for another visit soon.   


FIND OUT ABOUT...

Closest tube: Archway, Highgate


Waterlow Park is open from 7.30 until dusk.

Waterlow Park

Lauderdale House


Roxana Halls
  

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Highgate Cemetery

A MAGNIFICENT GARDEN CEMETERY


This Garden Cemetery comes in close behind its neighbour Hampstead Heath as my favourite London park. It was rightly called one of the Magnificent Seven - private cemeteries set up outside of London in the 1800s to aid the overcrowded inner-city graveyards.   






Highgate Cemetery has a special atmosphere and an atypical wilderness compared to most other city parks. In some places it almost feels as if the plants and trees are slowly creeping in over the graves, which of course were the case from sometime in the 1960s when Highgate Cemetery was abandoned.





Fortunately, Friends of Highgate Cemetery took charge over what was then a deteriorating ruin in 1975 and the charity has worked hard to restore and maintain it ever since.     



Talbot family catacomb also mentioning where the family lived in London.


THE VICTORIAN WILDERNESS


Though much work has been done and a grand landscape management plan is in progress it is still hard to imagine that this was originally meant to be as neat and manicured as Regent's Park with broad paths, open spaces and easy access to the mausoleums and graves. 


Note the obelisk, a symbol of eternal life and a reflection of the Egyptian revivail during the 19th century. 


I went on a guided tour of the older West Cemetery on a chilly Sunday morning but even so the group was fairly big and consisted of all sorts. Highgate is obviously much more popular than I realised... so come early to avoid waiting. 


These guided tours are the only way to visit the older West Cemetery while the East Cemetery is open on a normal basis.    



The guide was bubly, helpful and interesting without having to resort to stories of haunting spirits or vampires. 


The web is of course full of references to the Highgate Vampire, partly because Bram Stoker set part of Dracula in the cemetery, but apparently it's a bit of a no no to ask about this because of an incident in the 1970s where a small group actually broke into the cemetery and vandalised part of it in search of the vampire. 




HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE WEST CEMETERY


Fortunately, Highgate doesn't need a vampire to be interesting. The guide showed us new and old grave monuments, pointed out their elaborate symbolism and talked about the lives of the deceased as well as Victorian burial customs. She even took us inside a mausoleum.

Cannons turned up-side-down to mark the death of a millitary officer. This grave used to have a glass window in the middle so the family could always see the deceased when they visited.  


Many of graves told the visitor what profession the deceased had occupied in life like the pictures above and below. 

Other common symbols were:

  • Flaming torches turned upside down to mark the end of the earthly life and the beginning of the eternal life.
  • Greek, Egyptian and Roman columns, obelisks and urns reflecting older burial customs and a Victorian fashion imitating classical antiquity. Cremation was still illegal at this time.
  • Sleeping angels, especially on the graves of children.




George Wombwell had one of the more curious jobs in the cemetery

Thomas Sayers was a boxer, I think you can see a pair of gloves on the top part of his grave. The sleeping dog is not a common grave monument but the symbolism is fairly obvious - who wouldn't want their faithful pet to guard their grave? 




GRAVEYARD ARCHITECTURE


These pictures show the elaborate architecture in Highgate Cemetery, another reflection of the Victorian obssession with the ancient empires in Greece, Egypt and Rome. Highgate became a very fashionable place to have your loved ones enterred and the private enterprise made so much money that it could afford these lavish structures. It was of course extra expensive to be buried inside the Egyptian Avenue or the Circle of Lebanon. 




The Egyptian Avenue, complete with lotus flowers and obelisks. It is also built to look longer than it actually is through optical deceit. 


The Circle of Lebanon, www.wikipedia.org


THE EAST CEMETERY

It is a bit much to do both the East and West Cemetery at once in my opinion so these pictures are from a visit in early autumn 2010. 



The most famous 'resident' in the East cemetery is probably Karl Marx, whose grav someone attempted to bomb twice...

The sculptor Anna Mahler, daughter of Gustav Mahler is buried in the East Cemetery as well. I really like the sculpture on her grave.



 Just a couple of snaps that shows the beautiful and very green East Cemetery: 




FIND OUT ABOUT....

Closest tube: Archway, Highgate, Tufnell Park


Highgate Cemetery is split into East and West. West can only be accessed with a guide. Opening times for both is from 10 am. on weekdays and 11 am. on weekends until 5 pm.    

Entrance: Adults £3, Students £2