Sunday, June 2, 2013

Living in London!

Tea & Scone- yum!

Hello everyone- it's been a while since our last update and a lot has happend.  We traveled another 2 months in South America (heading to the Atacama Desert, Bolivia, Peru, back to Bolivia and Argentina) and spent a few months in Colorado saving money and working out visas before continuing our adventure by....MOVING TO LONDON!

I have been here now for 5 weeks and am settling into life in the city. Living here is absolutely incredible and I'm really loving it!  I am also looking for a work and spend a ton of time job searching, networking, etc. but that can wait for future posts.  I wanted to share a little about my neighborhood and what life is like here.

I am living in a fantastic 2-bed flat in Earl's Court. It's a neighborhood in West London and really central (Zone 1 on the tube).  From my experience, there are 2 parts to Earl's Court, a touristy area east of Earl's Court Road with a ton of hotels, and the area north of Cromwell Rd and west of the station near Warwick Rd, which is where I am. People familiar with London may think of Earl's Court as looking like this:

Beautiful terrace houses with the quintessential red Mini out front
But this is where I live:
My building
Yes, I live directly above the West Ken Tesco.  The arrow points to our place, right on the corner on the 2nd (US 3rd) floor on the first level of flats above the Tesco.  Yes, this is looking across a 6 lane highway (the A4), but the flat has newer "double-glazed" windows and is pretty quiet.  Not the prettiest exterior but it is super convenient. Our postcode is W14 8NJ- if you google that you will find our building on the map.

Living Room

As I mentioned before, the flat is really spacious by London standards. I have one lovely flatmate, Lydia, who is here for a few months before heading off to medical school in Wales. Her mom owns the flat and it was their family home for 10 years. It's a really comfortable place to be!

My room- (UK) King size bed!
Being the corner unit, we have a fantastic patio!
Living in London, beside the flat itself, the nearest Tube station, high street, and park are major influences on the neighborhood.
Earl's Court is the closest tube station and has 2 exits. I think of them as:

The "tourist" side- with it's own TARDIS (actually a memorial to a policeman)

and the "local" side

This is Earl's Court: a convention center across from the station

My high street is Kensington High Street, about a 1/2 mile walk from the apartment.  The  "high street" is where the major stores are, and in central London that means mostly large chains. Ken High Street has a M&S, TK Maxx (same as the TJ variety), H&M, Topshop, among others, AND the largest Whole Foods in the UK. 


Looking down the high street

Whole Foods- Spread over 3 floors full of local and European goodness

This is Argos, it's like a Target without a sales floor.  You pick out your purchase from a catalog or online, pay for it, and pick it up at a counter.  Haven't bought anything here yet, but def want to check out this unique retail model soon.
My nearest real park is Holland Park.  It's a really lovely park with manicured gardens (there's even a Japanese garden), sports fields, and wooded areas that make you forget that you're in a major city. I am also within walking distance of Hyde Park (SW corner) but I def prefer Holland Park. Lovely!

Park entrance off of Ken High St

Sport fields- they have batting cages, but not for baseball!

Gardens

Feels like you are in the country

To clsoe this post, here are some pics of my favorite tree.  I make sure to always walk past this square on my way to the high street. Hope it blooms all summer!
Another one across the street







Tuesday, June 26, 2012

El Chalten: Fitzroy & more glaciers!


Time for some more pics!  This time I'm posting from Fort Collins, Colorado.  The mercury is rising to 105 today so what better way to stay cool than review some icy pics from Argentina's Los Glaciares National Park!

After the cruise dropped us off in Punta Arenas, Chile, we back-tracked up through Puerto Natales and crossed the border to Argentina heading to El Calafate (a touristy mountain town not too different from Breckenridge or Estes Park) and then onto El Chalten, a much smaller village adjacent to the Monte Fitzroy massive (You may recognize Fitzroy as the mountain on the Patagonia logo). Where in Torres del Paine we had days of cloudy weather and snow, the weather in Chalten was clear, crisp, with atypical cloudless skies.

Some readers may be curious whether we preferred Fitzroy to Torres del Paine.  Our verdict that it's really worth seeing both.  The land crossing is easy and the visa fee for Americans in only collected in Santiago and Buenos Aires so there's no extra cost to hop over the border between Chile and Argentina (we crossed into Argentina 3 times and flew home from EZE without ever having to pay the Argentine fee).  Torres has a huge variety of dramatic scenery where Fitzroy is less diverse but just as spectacular.  Torres give you more of a wilderness experience while all of the major sights near Fitzroy can be done as day hike or overnight trips.  Chalten is cheaper than Puerto Natales (and there are no fees for camping in Los Glaciares) but you have to go through much more expensive Calafate to get there, in my experience, evening out the costs between the two destinations.  Really, if you are coming this far south, why not take the extra couple of days to see what both sides have to offer?  We recently met a fellow traveler in Tennessee (small world right?) who managed to fly down, trek in both parks, and visit the glaciers in an incredible 16 days!  

Enough talk...bring on the pics!

El Calafate. Our stopover point on the way to El Chalten

Sheep along the road from El Calafate to El Chalten

Tony next to Fitzroy in the distance. One of the first of the 200+ pics we'd take of the awesome peak.

On the road to El Chalten


Our first hike to view the Torre mountains on the south side of Fitzroy

Fall colors heading to the Torres


The torres are the spires on the right. Fitzroy is actually behind them.

Ice floating in Laguna Torre 

Tony climbing a tree on our way to the Fitzroy viewpoint.

And Mt. Fitzroy.... without a cloud in sight!




Sunrise on Mount FItzroy

Looking down on El Chalten

Tasty reward for all of that hiking!

Argentine naval station in Chalten (which is completely landlokced).

Our favorite place in Chalten...the most amazing empanadas of our trip!

Caprese empanadas!

Sunrise on Viedma Lake

This is the Viedma Glacier- which has a narrow face but has over 20 km (nearly 8 sq mi) of ice making it larger than the Grey Glacier in TDP and the more famous Perito Moreno Glacier near Calafate.  It's also alot more stable (with less calving) which makes it perfect for ice trekking!

Crevasse! (Thinking of Bear Grylls)


Crevasse!!

Looking into the ice is like looking at a wave in the ocean.

Tony would love to be ice climbing!

Surf's up!

Crevasse!!!

More blue ice

Climbers scaling an overhang




For scale- look at the 2 climbers on the right

Tony taking a nap

Gigantic iceland in Lake Viedma

Calafate plant- they say if you eat this you will return to Patagonia.  I hope it's true and we will  be back for another adventure!