Richard III will lead the Hampstead Pub Walk on New Year's Eve – with Mary & David joining in. Meet Richard at 7.30pm Hampstead tube station.
David writes…
Why Do It Our Way?*
Six
*thinking-outside-the-box *reasons. Good reasons. Reasons you probably won't have thought of.
They're personal reasons but you'll take them on board, I'm sure –
share them.
1. I object mightily –
object in principle – to having to pay £10 to look up at the night sky.
If you don't – well, that's what makes a horse race.
2. New Year's Eve in
central London – wall to wall humanity – is pickpockets' heaven. I
don't want any part of that – don't want to have to worry about that. Up
in Hampstead and up on Parliament Hill watching the fireworks we won't
have to worry about that.
3. Contra flow. By
that I mean, when the fireworks are over there are going to be a million people
down in central London stampeding for the Tube and buses. No one down
there is going to be able to "hop on a bus" or "hop on the Tube" because
everybody – an ocean of humanity – is going to be surging toward those buses and
Tube stations. Carriages are going to be crammed, jammed, overflowing.
Most people are going to be looking at long delays before they can
finally fight their way into a station and onto a carriage (or onto a bus).
That's not going to be our problem. We'll be heading in - not trying to get out.
Contra flow. No problem at all catching the Tube or getting on a bus.
Trust me, a lot of those people with "ring side" tickets for the central London
show are going to be walking home afterward – or walking a good part of
the way home. Because they won't be able to get on a Tube or a bus. That's
their problem and they're welcome to it. Our contra flow walkers won't be
drawing that short straw.
4. The thousand points
of light. Up top – up on Parliament Hill – we'll be able to see all the
fireworks, right across London. That's in addition to the big show. So: 1)
the Big Show, the main event down in central London; 2) the local stuff -
the nearby Hampstead area fireworks; 3) the further afield fireworks
"sideshows" across London. So: a full palette as opposed to just the one big
show.
5. The pubs we're
going to will be busy but not packed to the rafters, not turning people away.
6. Mobs. Who needs
them?
7. Seventh reason
isn't a thinking-outside-the-box job. It's that both halves of the evening
are wonderful. A New Year's Eve Pub Walk in Hampstead – how do you go wrong
with that? And the second half – making the short walk to South
Hampstead with Richard, meeting up there with Mary and me, spending an hour or so
in a very agreeable pub (and if anybody wants I'll [David] be very happy
to do a spot of South Hampstead guiding – Keats' House, the
"loveliest street in London", etc.) – and then come the appointed time the
short stroll up to the top of Parliament Hill and our perch to "take
survey of London", watch the fireworks, etc. – well, it's the perfect grand
finale. Put the two halves together you've got a very special, a memorable
New Year's Eve. *Memories make us rich. *
A
London Walk costs £10 – £8 concession. To join a London Walk, simply meet your
guide at the designated tube station at the appointed time. Details of all
London Walks can be found at www.walks.com.