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

Isle of Wight



Isle of Wight with friends Lakshmi, Anand and lil Kavya was a short holiday.While I suppose we missed out on quite a few attractions, the ferry, Owl and Monkey Haven and Amazon Zoo surely added some wonderful pages to our memoir. 
Waiting for the ferry to the isle


Gurnard Pines is where we stayed ..a country resort, pretty remote and commute to the bus stop meant long long walks. Its a wonder how our lil ones co-operated so much...thanks to the greenery around and having each other for company.



At amazon zoo, a simulated environment ..

Meerkats
Trying out some monkey moves outside the mokey haven..:)
The variety of owls in the owl and mokey haven ...and the parrots, toucans...what a splash of colur !




Tribal tools, n musical instruments
                                                                                      

 Surprising how much energy these little ones can have packed inside them ! And we thought all that excitement, the long walks and the running around was going to make them go straight to bed on return :)). Hmm there was lot more on their agenda though ...

                                                                                  
                         



And more on -

Roman Bath

The train journey from london to Roman Bath is a treat for the eyes tired of bustling city life. The vast green lands dotted with sheep and horses, present the most refreshing 2 hours one can spend on a train. 

Our visit to the Roman bath was a beautiful experience.
The Abbey was welcoming - abuzz with tourists and poppies on a cross marking "Rememberence day"(Poppy Day) 

Snapshots from our visit to The Bath - 


 The Abbey with its amazing stained glass windows, and poppies to mark Rememberance day

   
The Public Bath - Hot water bubbles up from a spring..steam rises from the water giving it a magnicfient look


In the past this natural phenomenon was beyond human understanding and it was believed to be the work of the ancient gods. In Roman times a great Temple was built next to the Spring dedicated to the goddess Sulis Minerva, a deity with healing powers.



Fourteen pieces (in the first photo) of carved stone have been found from the decorative front of the Temple to Sulis Minerva , a projected image of original piece , some artifacts from Roman lifestyle
 


Interestingly, curses were written and thrown in the spring. These curses were mostly complaints against crimes committed and also curses against suspected crime-doers.





On top Bronze, gilded head of the goddess Sulis Minerva, The king's bath, some artifacts, the decorated spring drain, the goddess of Minerva in bronze, a stone head that decorated a wealthy, fashionable lady's tomb , and a "Roman" preist (Ved kept asking why he wasnt taking bath, or why he is still there if he's finished ! ! )

Where we go goes the McQueen, dietiess of Romans  --- Vedaant concentrating on audio tour --- the "Britain from air" exhibition, outings are incomplete without ice-creams, photo of mom n dad by Ved.

Museum of Transport

Awww! Just look at that !

If you ask me - Heaven looks like the Museum of Transport :) to a 3 year old with its steam engines,  horse carraiges, buggies, the trams, buses and toys in the play area.

Located conviniently in Covent Garden the chillout place in London for tourists Museum of Transport is a perfect place for Dad's n kids while mommies hang out in the handicraft market next door !

Mom 'n Reshma aunty with an 1826 omnibus
2 Vedaant's atop a steam engine from bygone times


Did you know?  
 London in 1800 was compact, most people got around on foot. During the century, innovations in river, railways, and road transport changed Londoners' lives fundamentally.


River Thames - Wherries were the first river taxis. Introduction of steamboats in 1815 increased passenger transport. By 1850s these carried several million passengers annually.


Railways - The railway boom in 1830s and 1840s meant new routes into London. By the 1870s, nearly all journeys to and from London were made by rail.

 Streets - Light horse-drawn cabs became fashionable among rich Londoners. From 1829 others travelled on London's Shillibeer horse buses. Horse-drawn trams challenged the supremacy of the horse bus after 1870. 
London Underground

Today, London's underground network is a mind-boggling impressive mesh of trains that more than one billion passengers a year, as many as the entire National Rail network, with around three and a half million journeys made each day, on 11 lines serving 270 stations (See map below )
The wooden city layout in the playarea. Neat Vintage wheelers at the back , aint it? 




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The Tube roundel
Map of london underground





The IMAX experience

                                           

Oh we know Halloween is not here yet :), and no this is not a dress rehearsal. That's Vedaant in a 3D movie - his very first 3D experience - 'Toy Story 3' at bfi IMAX, London. Boy oh boy ! For the first few minutes, he was giggling, crouching, stretching out trying to grasp or fend objects, only to realise he could not really reach them - till he started to get the hang of the story.

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Anyway, as I was saying, Watching a movie at IMAX is different ! They say, the screen is the largest screen in Britain. Have to say..its HUGE ! As tall as 4 Double-Decker buses!  

The show begins with an awesome sound and light show that showcases the excellent speaker system that practically engulfs you throughout the movie.

Some of those 'tornado' sounds that were demonstrated scared the living daylights out of us ..haha, and daddy's hand was big comfort. The day and night animation demo was really cool though.




Did you know?

How does a 3D film work ?


googling away...


A 3D film consists of two films being shown simultaneously. The 3D camera is simultaneously presenting one moving image to your left eye and another, slightly offset image, to your right eye.It has two lenses set the same distance apart as our eyes, and films both the left and the right eye images at the same time.
The more modern way to handle 3D uses polarized light. This technique makes use of a very weird property of light called polarization. Imagine two synchronized
projectors. One projector is showing the images of the movie intended for the left eye, while the other is projecting the images for the right eye. Both
projectors point at the same screen.

Now, in front of the lens of the left projector, we put a polarizing filter. The light coming through the projector has light waves oriented in both up-down and left-right directions. But the filter only lets through the light waves with the up-down orientation. We put another polarizing filter on the right projector that lets through only the light waves with the left-right orientation.

And to complete the system, we have everyone in the audience wear glasses that also contain two polarized filters. So, the left eye can see only the light coming from the left projector, and the right eye can see only the light from the right projector. The brain puts the two separate images together and creates the 3D effect.

 The two pictures are then projected through polarized glass, each eye polarized differently so that the left eye does not see the image of the right eye and vice versa. The viewer wears polarized glasses to help keep the two images separate.
 
Your brain then converges the two images and the magic is complete - the picture is within arm's reach!


IMAX Technology

The key to the IMAX experience is cinema's largest film frame, being projected by the world's most sophisticated projector onto a huge screen that encompasses the viewer's peripheral vision.


IMAX Projector

The IMAX projector is the most advanced, precise and powerful projector system in the world! The filmmakers who developed the IMAX system, started by using multiple cameras and multiple
projectors to create that 'in the picture' sensation. There was no single camera or projection system available to provide the image with the clarity and size that was required, so they searched for a new system that would enable them to deliver the experience without the joins. They developed a system called 15perf/70mm, the height of the film being 70mm and the width 15 perforations wide.

Each frame of film is rolled onto registration pins over special optical glass called field flattener. The film is then held in place, flat against the glass, by a vacuum whilst the image is projected on the screen. This system keeps the film perfectly still, further enhancing the illusion that you are really there.

The projector's patented shutter mechanism additionally transmits one-third more light than the shutter in conventional
projectors. The lamps used in the projector are 15, 000 watt xenon arc lamps that are water-cooled.


IMAX Sound System

The sound system is also larger than life. In order to support an image 20m high and 26m wide it needs to be! The Sonics system, specifically designed for IMAX theatres, eliminates variations in volume and sound quality over the theatre seating area. This allows all members of the audience to experience superb sound quality regardless of where they may be seated.

Six tracks of sound are sent to 6 large cluster speakers - 4 behind the screen, 1 to the rear left and 1 to the rear right behind the audience. There is also a huge bass speaker located behind the screen. 11, 600 watts of power wrap the audience in a crystal clear world of sound that completes the marriage with the image on screen. The digital soundtrack is loaded from a DVD disk onto a computer, which locks the projector and soundtrack together and controls the show. This system is called Digital Theatre Audio Control, or DTAC.

IMAX Cameras

IMAX Cameras, an integral part of the IMAX system, are extremely versatile and for each special situation IMAX designers and engineers have had to come up with innovative solutions.

The IMAX film format is so large that the film canisters in the IMAX camera can only hold 3 minutes of film at a time. This means you can shoot a scene for three minutes and then you have to stop and reload the camera. Reloading the camera takes approximately 30 minutes!






*Sources

http://www.military.com/entertainment/movies/movie-news/how-stuff-works-3d-movies

Trafalgar Square


 Trafalgar square is one of our favourite places in London. The huge lions are amazing to climb on. But its the entire atmosphere, full of tourists, and loungers and kids that gets to you. And not to forget..the brave peigons who it seem love being chased :)
 
Trafalgar Square is a square in central London, England. With its position in the heart of London, it is a tourist attraction, and one of the most famous squares in the United Kingdom and the world - a place to hold political demonstrations, community gatherings, and special events. 



Vedaant and his cousins on top of the lion !
 


Did you know? 

Nelson's Column is in the centre of the square, surrounded by fountains  and four huge bronze lions.  Interestingly, the material used to make lions is metal from melted-cannons post war !



 
Nelson's Ship in a Bottle (24 May 2010 – present) – this work, by a leading Anglo-Nigerian artist, consists of a replica of Nelson's ship, the HMS Victory, with sails made of printed fabric in a colourful African pattern inside a large glass bottle stopped with a cork. 


Thats Vedu's Sandeep Kaka with the gallery in the background behind the fountain.
Haven't visited the National Gallery which stands magnificiently on one side of the square....sometime soon.

Muchute Farm



...This is what we sang all the way from home to the farm. A song from our favourite "Barney visits the farm" CD. 
"We're on the way, we're on the way, on the way to grandpa's farm...
On our grandpa's farm there is a little pink pig...
On our grandpa's farm there is a little pink pig..
The pig it makes a sound like this - OINK OINK "

... umm, no "little pink pig"here. One big hog though. How much it ate and how much it weighed, we wondered !

The day was lovely, which is always a bonus in London.  And turkeys and sheep seemed to be in good mood. The goats though were in bit of a foul mood, and they fought with their heads ramming into each other...but seemed to have made up.

The little little guinea pigs in their pens we cute , so were the rabbits ..
  
But the best of all were the horses........so magnificient, elegantly trotting away with the equally elegant looking little women in their riding gear.

The riding school was on, and my lil guy seemed very fascinating. We promised them we would come back when Ved is 5 yrs old, which was the minimum age for riding.

Visit to the Mudchute farm was our first "city farm" visit. And a nice little experience at that . 












Ruislip Lido - the perfect picnic !!

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A canal reservoir, an artificial beach surrounded by beautiful Woods, Ruislip Lido is a beautiful place for a day trip in West London.

Wonderful walk through the woods with friends, Spotting birds in the lake, bathing under the sprinklers and building castles in the sand. What more to make a perfect picnic ? There is more though... cherry on the cake is the amazing little Ruislip Lido railway that takes you on a trip through the woods , around almost half the reserviour.