Monday, January 01, 2007

"Coloured cottons hang in the air" - 25 December 2006

Koutoubia Mosque
“Ducks and pigs and chickens call
Animal carpet wall to wall”

“Coloured cottons hang in the air
Charming cobras in the square”



We spent the morning finding our own way around the Souks, after a photo shoot at the highest mosque in Marrakech.


The afternoon was an organised guided tour around the Souks. The area is so extensive that we saw a completely different set of vendors. The souks are an amazingly varied and colourful area that was originally separated into various craft areas. Now the blacksmiths are the only craft to have retained their own area.


In the evenings the main Square of the Medina comes alive: there are snake charmers, story tellers, acrobats, performers in colourful costumes, medicine men, fruit and juice sellers and open air restaurants that spring up in the centre. The souks, too, are even more mysterious and seem more convoluted at night.

Driving through the souksIn spite of being very crowded with people jostling and sellers imploring passers-by to examine their wares, there is still room to drive a vehicle through the melee.

Introduction to Marrakech - 24 December 2006

Palais de la Bahia
The first tour organized by Voyages Jules Verne was an Introduction to Marrakech. This took in the highlights of the Medina (the old city) with a visit to the Palais de la Bahia, the Marjorelle Gardens, the Saadian Tombs and a museum. Palais de la BahiaAfter lunch we were treated to a horse drawn carriage ride around the outside of the Medina walls, all in all a full and interesting day.

Palais de la BahiaThe small section of the Bahia Palace that was not looted by a subsequent ruler is slowly being restored and has wonderful mosaic tiling, carved stucco, beautiful painted ceilings and cedar carvings.

Saadian TombsThe Saadian Tombs are three mausoleums that contain the bodies of the Rulers, their children, their wives and, in the courtyard between them, the favoured servants. The interesting fact is that not a single grave has a name or any other identifying mark: the theory being that in death all are equal.

Majorelle GardensThe Majorelle Gardens are the work of a French ex-pat, now owned by YSL, and are totally non-moroccan, a beautiful green oasis in the bustling city with an amazing collection of cactii. Majorelle GardensThe blue paint colour used extensively throughout the Gardens is now called Majorelle Blue.

"They're taking me to Marrakech" - 23 December 2006

Moroccan House Hotel“Wouldn't you know we're riding on the Marrakech Express
They're taking me to Marrakech
All aboard the train”

Little did we know when we were singing this in the 60’s that one day we would be riding the Marrakech express, only it was a plane not a train. However, a train may well have been quicker. We were flying GB Airways (part of BA) and between them and BAA, the airport owners, they had created a total foul up of the boarding process.

Moroccan House HotelLondon had been fog bound for a week and many travellers had been stranded but the fog had lifted enough for flights to be leaving on schedule.

We arrived at the North Terminal via the sky-train and headed for Zone F as indicated by the information boards. As we approached Zone F we found our way blocked by a queue with helpful queuers telling us that we had to return the way we had just come, go outside the building and join the queue from there, and that it had taken them 40 minutes to get back inside the building.

Moroccan House HotelIt was a truly amazing piece of bad planning. One would expect that an airline would know how many people they were planning to process at any given time, after all they had sold the tickets, and to put on enough staff to cope with the check-in numbers.

So after arriving at 10:30 for a 14:15 flight we filled in the entire time standing in queues.In spite of it all we arrived safely in Marrakech and booked into the Moroccan House Hotel, a smallish hotel delightfully decorated throughout in Moroccan tiling and paintwork.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Mews views - 16 December 2006

Mews near Brompton Rd There is always more to discover in London. We have done organized walks and self-guided walks from books and each book has its own slant on what to see and where to go. If you turn right instead of left you see a whole different world and so it is with these walks. Although one might be tempted to think that one had ‘done’ a particular area, each new walk brings new surprises.

False frontWe started at Paddington as we wanted to find an iconic piece of Victorian ingenuity. When the first underground lines were installed they were done using cut-and-cover, where possible along the lines of existing roads. But what happens if the road ends in a T intersection and there is a row of Georgian town-houses across the path? Simple, just remove one from the row and replace it with a matching false façade and no one will know.

From the rearThis is exactly what happened in Lenister Gardens and the reason they did not ‘cover’ everything was that the original trains were pulled by coal powered, steam engines and the smoke had to go somewhere.

Albert MemorialLeaving there we walked across Kensington Gardens, past the Albert Memorial and Royal Albert Hall and on to the Museums where winter markets and an ice-skating rink had been set up. Science Museum Rink and MarketsIt was all terribly ‘European’ but, given the current mild temperatures, did not quite have the same atmosphere.

The V&A has a rather fascinating sound-and-light installation in the courtyard this year so we paid a visit before disappearing down some of the mews that are so plentiful in this area.

V&A light showOnce the stables and tradesmen’s areas, they are now highly sought after, as they are the only dwellings in London with garaging. (In typical UK fashion, usually not with a car parked in them.)

Smallest Mews house?A local who noticed the camera sent us off on a detour to see the shallowest mews house in London. It probably qualifies as the shallowest dwelling of any sort in the UK, it is not actual clear how one would fit a bed into this home and if the bed was there how one would fit beside it to get in or out, or make it.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Christmas at the Palace - 10 December 2006

Blenheim Palace
Each year we visit one of the stately homes dressed for Christmas.

This year we went to see how Blenheim Palace had been transformed. The grand gates
Unfortunately, the usual rules applied and photography inside was prohibited so we have nothing to show of the decorations.
The dining room, with the fires blazing and the table laid for Christmas was a real treat. A 'Christmas' tree in the grounds

Saturday, December 09, 2006

The name's "Park", "Black Park" - 9 December 2006

Black ParkFrom the car park at Black Park we walked through the pinewoods to the boundary fence of Pinewood Studios, home of the James Bond series. Outside was a huge blue screen, which in real life was quite significantly different in colour from the sky behind. Pinewoods blue backdropInterestingly, in the picture the screen is quite hard to differentiate from the sky behind.

Langley ParkLangley ParkFrom there we walked down the studio’s side boundary and across the road to Langley Park, past the lake, with views to the mansion on the far shore, and back to the lake at Black Park where we had started.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Victorian Pubs - 3 December 2006

The Argyll ArmsOur historical theme continued in to Sunday when we enjoyed an English Heritage ‘pub-crawl’ around eight ornately decorated Victorian listed Public Houses. Unfortunately, being Sunday the two closest to the City of London were closed.

The SalisburyWe started at The Argyll Arms, just off Oxford St where we had a luke-warm meal which would have been much better had it been delivered to our table hot. Sampling various wares we visited The Tottenham, The Salisbury, The Coal Hole and The Princess Louise. We passed by The Cittie of Yorke and The Punch Tavern then finished with dessert at The Black Friar.

The Argyll ArmsThe cut and acid-etched glass and mirrors in a number of these establishments are quite something to behold. It is amazing that so much of this Victorian opulence survived the Blitz.