England

02-26-13 Japanese Garden

2013 02-26 Japanese GardenHere is the chain of consciousness that led me to post this photo:

  1. I'm not impressed with the options available on TV
  2. I check my DVR for possibilities
  3. I find that I have recorded 9 episodes of "Lonely Planet," a travel show
  4. I start watching the first one, which is set in London
  5. Half-way through, the travel guide takes us to Kew Gardens
  6. I remember that I have some Kew Gardens photos
  7. I stop watching the TV show
  8. I find this photo and work on it
  9. I post it here

That sounds like a disciplined mind hard at work, doesn't it?

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Look Right!

To someone from the US (and much of the rest of the world), one of the many endearing idiosyncrasies of England is that they drive on the "wrong" side of the road. One would think that this would have little impact on the pedestrian but that would be wrong. For example, which side of the sidewalk do you walk on? How about people movers at airports? Escalators? Etc.As a pedestrian in London for the first time, I appreciated the courtesy of the warnings painted at many crosswalk because more than once, I looked left as I would at home, stepped into the crosswalk and then was aware that traffic was bearing down on me on the "wrong" side of the road.Incidentally, without trying to sound pedantic, 34% of the world's population drives on the left. The French used to drive on the left but Napoleon changed it. I don't know why.

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04-08-09 The London Eye

By Scott Shephard

 

I've been told that the London Eye is not a Ferris Wheel because Ferris was a Frenchman and the French and the British have their differences. So don't called it a "Ferris Wheel." Whatever you call it, the London Eye is an impressive feat of engineering and technology. And it offers a very comfortable Ferris-Wheel-Like ride. It was expensive (over $20); but it is certainly worth it.

The clouds in the background add interest to this photo. Another things that is interesting to me is the tiny airplane that seems to be flying through the spokes.

Canon 5D 1/1000s f/14.0 ISO250 73mm (Canon 24-105 f/4.0L IS)

FlickrScott Shephard Photography

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