Welcome to London Discovery Tours

Posts Tagged ‘london walking tours’

Now that’s what I call a London walk!

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Have you ever found yourself spoilt for choice wondering which London Walking Tour is the one for you? It might sound a strange question but we do often get phone calls from people who find themselves spoilt for choice over exactly which one of our multitude of tours they should take.

Of course it very much depends on your interests. A good starter tour is perhaps our popular Secret City London walk which shows you some of the wonderful places at the heart of the old city of London. This really shows you how this great City really does hide its treasures from prying eyes and makes it all the more wonderful to discover the hidden places that lie tucked away behind the busy main roads.

Your interests may be more towards the literary? No problem you can explore the streets of Charles Dickens London on the several different Dickens walks that we offer. Or you can explore the district of Southwark on the south side of the River Thames, across the river from St Paul’s Cathedral, on one of our Shakespeare’s London walks.

If you interests are more towards the sinister aspects of London’s history then fear not (or should that be start to fear!) as we offer a regular Jack the Ripper Tour of London that departs seven chilling nights a week at 7pm. This is what we really call a London walk. It involves walking old, historic streets that have changed little since 1888 when Jack the Ripper stalked their shadows. It includes a cracking murder murder mystery that will keep you guessing with each twist and turn of both the narrative and the streets. But it also provides a glimpse of the fascinating social history of one of London’s most multi cultural districts.  All in all it is the perfect tour of London.

So when you are looking at our London walks and trying to figure out which one you should take, just read our detailed descriptions and see for yourself why the old saying “when a man is tired of London he is tired of life” still holds true today.

There’s More to London than Walks.

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

It might seem an odd thing to say for a compnay that conducts London walks but there is a lot more to do in London than just walking about.

Don’t get me wrong on this, Walking is a great way to discover all the wonderful places that this wonderful city has to offer, but if it was just about taking a walk, well you could quite simply pick up a map or and A to Z and head off through the streets of the capital on your own voyage of discovery.

Whereas that’s a great way to get about London, come to think of it it’s an excellent way to get about, but we like to think that we offer you just that little bit more than just, plain simple London walks.

You see the thing about being taken on a guided tour is that you get a full, dare I say it, theatrical experience. A good London walking tour guide will be able to really bring the past to life or, as we like to say, will breathe life in to the history that surrounds you.

It’s one thing, for example, to know that Shakespeare lived and worked in Southwark, on the south side of the River Thames from St. Paul’s Cathedral, but it’s quite another thing to learn about the people he lived and worked with, to hear great little anecdotes that bring his life and his times to vivid life.

Likewise, it’s great read in a book that a certain building in London is haunted by the ghost of a woman in white, but when you hear the tale on one of our exciting  London walks you have it told by a masterful storyteller whose narrative will creep you out and have you looking over your shoulder lest the white lady in question is sneaking up on you at that very moment.

These are just a few examples of the difference between just walking around with a map and having a guide take you round on one of our London Walking Tours.

Get the true East End story with a London Discovery Walk

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Are you from another part of the United Kingdom or another country and are fascinated by London history and the way of life? If so, then this London walk is perfect for you. This London sightseeing tour will take you through all the streets and buildings of the East End, to allow you to really imagine what life was like years and years ago.

Walk through the medieval streets to discover what made this area of the city so different from the rest and what made the people in it tick. Breathe in the classic East End atmosphere to give you a real sense of adventure during this London walk.

How about gangster lovers? Maybe you are a big fan of old East End gang culture or have seen the film The Krays so many times that you cannot wait to see where this evil duo grew up and committed most of their crimes and torture.

Or you may have grown up in the East End of London and want to know where you came from and if you have any traits that relate to the East End. Think back to stories your parents or grandparents told you and relive their moments through the narrow and cold streets. You can discover so much you didn’t know about London with a London sightseeing tour.

See with your own eyes how little this area has changed and what makes it so unique. This is just one of the many walks of London and is a true insight into the history and culture that made the East End of London the charismatic place it is today.

Explore London’s Gateway with a Thames London Walk

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

The Thames River is brimming with London history and every person who visits London or lives in London will no doubt take time to see this iconic stretch of water and learn about the fascinating history behind it with a London walk.

With Discovery Walks, our London Panorama tour begins at the heart of London, on the banks of the River Thames. Explore these famous river banks by foot and take the paths of the Roman legions where Julius Caesar first crossed over the river.

As you continue on these London walking tours you will sense the strong historic tales that it holds. You will walk through places where the battles between the Saxons and the Danes took place during the Dark Ages, right up to more modern times where it is used for more leisure-based activities.

This London sightseeing tour then takes you on a boat and actually along the River Thames. This will enable you to see the huge scale of this river, and help you envisage why it was also used as a highway for the transportation of goods.

View the Anglican St Paul’s Cathedral which sits at one of the highest places in London city itself. Plus, you can sail towards the most famous bridge, Tower Bridge, just a stones throw away from the Tower of London where the Crown Jewels are held.

This London walk finishes back on foot at Westminster Bridge
, where you can see the Houses of Parliament or Palace of Westminster as it is also known. This London walk is a great way to see a vast amount of London sights in one tour.

Seat of the soul

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Bored, stressed, tired and feeling a bit overwhelmed at work, but not sure how to counter it? Being out in the great outdoors can often be a great source of rejuvenating the anatomy of your soul. “You have got to be kidding me” you may think to yourself.

You shouldn’t – London walks are a great stress reliever, and a great way to absorb the capital’s wonderful culture.

The sense of self

Finding solitude and a sense of “stillness” is what you can find on a London sightseeing tour. Going on a famous walk in London may be exactly what you need, just to allow yourself to ‘stand still’ for a moment, break away from the daily hustle and bustle and appreciate the beauty surrounding you in this extraordinary capital.

All year long, you had been driving around, trying to meet those all important deadlines, exposing you to every frustration bumper to bumper traffic has to offer. A London walk may be just what you need!

London walks offer you a great opportunity to break free from just that. More so, you are able to experience an uplifting endeavour such as this all by yourself, with your family, kids and loved ones.

With the many different London walks we specialise in, we like to think of ourselves as offering healing for the soul and an opportunity for you to make up for lost time – something we are all too familiar with. Reconnecting with the seat of your soul ultimately can do wonders for the next time duty calls.

Green, green grass of home

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

For a while, you had been toying with the idea of taking at least one tour through London. The city of London promises breathtaking, extraordinary sightseeing – bringing back to life its magical history; a history that surrounds the people and places in contemporary London.

A walk in London, is simply one of the greatest gifts you can give yourself

Regardless of whether you are a local or a foreigner, every traveller’s worst nightmare is being ill informed about the city’s sights and where they can be located. Here at Discovery Walks we allow you to thoroughly research your options, and we are committed to our service delivery.

Our knowledge base stretches beyond simply knowing about the best London walks you may experience in the hub of Britain’s capital. Our main priority, you will find, is based upon the premise that we want your most valued memories linger on.

Choices of walks vary, ranging from walks through the Scottish Highlands, notorious walks, to London walks through the city’s most renowned East and West Ends. You are sure to find a London walk suited to tickle your every fancy, depending on your level of sense of adventure.

You may be aware of Britain’s variable weather patterns, as well as, though limited, dangerous wildlife. Flexibility is what you, the traveller, ought to build into your approach when deciding to explore this gift to yourself. Our trained professional staff are here to offer you not only assistance with best choice of London walk, but also practical advice on making your choice of London walk pleasant, safe and last but not least, memorable.

The Perfect Walk of London.

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

There are so many London walks routes that you could follow. You could, for example, explore the area of the Inns of Court on a Legal London Walking Tour.

You could venture onto the wild expanse of Hampstead Heath and then take a stroll through the village of Hampstead on a Walk.

If you want to have a night out that is totally different then why not consider exploring the old pubs and historic inns and taverns of the City on a fun and fascinating London Pub Walk?

The truth is that, with a City like London the only thing that limits you in your exploration is your imagination.

We have been devising Walks of London for 28 years and, in that time, we have covered almost every square inch of London. Yet, strange as it might seem, things still crop up from time to time on our London Walking Tours that surprise even us!

That is because London as a City evolved rather than being built to a plan. One of the things we always stress to out walkers is that, if you really want to explore London you must not walk around with your eyes glues to the ground, you must look all around you. Up down and sideways.

Take Fleet Street for example. If you walk along it from Ludgate Circus you really should pause and look left at the graceful spire of St. Bride’s Fleet Street. This lovely spire was designed by Sir Christopeher Wren.

But it also the spire that inspired the modern tiered wedding cake, a fact that those who take part in our London walks really get to appreciate. Yet many of them say that they would never have really stopped and really looked at and thought about that lovely, graceful spire had we not pointed it out to them and explained its history.

That is why our  London walks are such a good way to explore London because they make you see beyond the obvious and really look at a City that is both beautiful and fascinating in equal measure.

London Jack the Ripper Walks.

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Our Jack the Ripper Tour of London is both special and atmospheric.

It takes place every night of the week at 7pm and we are the only London walks to start our tour right in the heart of the area where the murders began.

Further more ours is the only Jack the Ripper London walk on which the number of participants is limited to a manageable and sensible number.

We feel this is better for everyone.

It’s certainly better for you the client because it means that you are part of a much more intimate experience and it also means that we can actually get into the atmospheric old alleyways where the Jack the Ripper murders occurred.

So when you join our Jack the Ripper Tour you will be with a guide who you can see and hear. You will not be part of a huge cattle drive that might number over 100 people.

  • You will start in the very heart of the area where the murders occurred.
  • You will go straight into the old alleyways that really do still have the feel of that long ago autumn when Jack the Ripper stalked them.
  • You will follow a, more or less, chronological route that allows the story to build in a logical order.
  • You will see more of the murder sites than you will with any other London walks company.
  • You will walk through some wonderful old streets that are both historic and atmospheric.
  • You will be part of a small, intimate group, not jostling with lots of other people to see and hear.

Finally, we will show you actual photographs of the streets through which you are walking as they were in 1888, so you will get a real feel for the area through which you are walking on your Jack the Ripper London Walking Tour.

BOOK A JACK THE RIPPER TOUR OF LONDON

Turning Over a New Leaf in Walks.

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

We started with a pun this morning and, since we’re still going to be talking about a tree, we thought we might as well continue with the theme, hence the title of this blog.

We’re looking at adding a whole series of new London walks next year to be led by our team of freelance Blue Badge Guides who we’ve been working with more and more this year.

Blue Badge Guides are, quite simply, the best trained and most professional guides in the world.

The course that they have to do to attain their guiding qualification is both grueling and in depth. Yet they emerge with the ability to be able to guide on any subject and in any part of London and other parts of the country.

So that is why we have been using more and more Blue Badge Guides on our London walks.

One of the areas we are going to be branching out into next year (hence the awful puns about turning over a new leaf and branching out) is Art Tours of London. That is why we have been taking you inside Tate Modern in our last few blogs and will continue to to so in the days ahead.

This morning’s London Walking Tour blog ended with Penone with his Tree of Twelve Metres taking an industrial beam that he had purchased from a saw mill back to its basic form as a tree.

Penone makes us aware of the simple fact that everything made of wood was once a tree, so he has extracted from the beam the shape of a tree that was fossilized within.

He has gone back over the entire phenomenon of growth and traced the moment when the hand of man brought the trees growth to a halt.

Penone said of his work “I consider my work in a certain sense like a film sequence, shot in the opposite direction and strongly accelerated.”

So his Tree of 12 metres can be looked at in three phases.

At the base of each half of the tree we see the initial beam.

Then you can see the chisel marks that led to the moment when the still unfinished tree surfaced from the beam.

Finally you can look up at the tree restored to its form.

Looked at in this way it is a very beautiful, even graceful work and is illustrative of the concept that art is often not what it seems, because when you know the background of how Penone created this, you realsie that, what at first seems to be nothing more than two trees displayed as art, is in fact a carefully chiseled sculpture carved with all the skill and precision of a Renaissance sculptor.

We’ll be moving on in Tate Modern very shortly and having a look at two more art works in the Energy and Process wing at Tate Modern.

You can, if you wish, join us on one of our Jack the Ripper Walks or even enjoy one of the other Walking Tours that we offer to groups on a private basis.

London - it’s a Walk of Art

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Yesterday we left you cowering beneath the two huge slabs of metal that combine to make Richard Serra’s Trip Hammer, having earlier discussed where else you can see examples of his work on our London walks.

Today we’ll have a closer look at this precariously balanced piece and ponder exactly what is the meaning behind it.

Of course the main point that we like to make time and again on our Walks of London is that, no matter where you are standing in this great city look around you.

London is a city of surprises and on our London walking tours we make a point of creating wonder out of the ordinary.

But for now, let’s return to Trip Hammer.

Richard Serra was born in San Francisco  in 1939. Whilst at university he helped support himself by working in steel mills, and this would later have an enormous impact on his art and an influence on the materials he chose to use in his art.

Although he has worked in lead and other materials, examples of which can be seen in the main hub of the Energy and Process wing, steel has become his preferred material for his art.

With Trip Hammer you can actually see how he likes to use the very steeliness of the steel to create an abstract that doesn’t represent anything, but which most certainly makes you ponder it, perhaps even fear it.

It is, in effect, taking the concept of Marcel Duchamp’s “ready mades” and using an ordinary, everyday object, that is not really meant to be seen, and displaying it in such away as to make the spectator not just look at it but to also wonder about it.  Both to stand in awe before it and be apprehensive about the potential for disaster that emanates from the work - it is, if you like, the ultimate in chance in art.

But there is also  the natural art in the steel itself.

Steel, of course, degrades and rusts - you can see this on the two pieces of steel he uses for Trip Hammer, both of which show signs of rust.

So this element adds another dimension to the work, ensuring that it will keep changing and developing as a piece.

Amazingly in Spain  in 2005, the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid announced that they had somehow managed to “mislay” a 38-tonne sculpture that Serra had created!

Our next posting will look at another intriguing work in Tate Modern where chance really does play a part in the very creation of the painting itself.

Be sure to check out the various London walks we offer and don’t forget that we also do a nightly Jack the Ripper Tour that you might like to join us on.