First, a spot of bitching. Is there any reason why bus drivers in London refuse to accept cash and tell me to either go underground or eat oysters? I just wanted to take a short ride, not mount a complex production with day passes or whatever.
On the positive side, cab drivers are so polite that I wonder how the inhabitants of the Buckingham Palace can manage to do any better in terms of manners.
Here is the boutique hotel where I’m staying:
It’s a 200-year-old pub that has a few rooms upstairs. There is a bookstore right next to it and a ton of restaurants, cafés and stores.
Here is the room:
Yes, it’s tiny, like everything a normal person can afford in London but when I open the balcony door, it’s like I’m lying in the midst of Hampstead (in a good sense):
If my husband read my blog, I doubt he’d like the part about me lying in the midst of Hampstead. So it’s a good thing he doesn’t.
Hampstead is filled with quaint little streets and corners:
And every once in a while you run across a majestic old building like this:
And I’ve only been here for a couple of hours! More to follow. . .





“First, a spot of bitching.” AKA “a wee bit of a whinge”
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Great pictures! Am I correct in assuming (because of the high-resolution clarity) that you took them with an actual camera rather than a cell phone?
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No, this is the cell phone! It has a really amazing camera. It’s a Samsung Galaxy Note with a big screen.
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The London public transport system is cashless
Oyster is the name of the contact card used to pay on the bus, underground and overground.
You touch it to a yellow circular symbol located on the front of buses and the entry barriers for the underground and overground, it then beeps and let’s you through.
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Where does one buy Oysters?
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