Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Back to the Eye


Yesterday I got out for a little adventure in London, thanks to a friend at work and a family with kids at our school. The family wound up with four spare tickets for a river cruise and a visit to the London Eye, and they gave the tickets to my friend and co-worker. He invited me and two more guys along.

I've been to the London Eye several times, but it's been ages. I've just spent about 20 minutes going through old blog posts and trying to figure out when I was last there. I think it was July 2012, when I went twice -- once with Dave's parents and once with our friend Kellee.

So I was due for another visit. But first, the river cruise:


We sat on the top deck of the boat and got a look at sights along the river from the Houses of Parliament to just beyond Tower Bridge. Our helpful guide Jordan pointed everything out and told bad jokes along the way. I wondered if he ever gets sick to death of doing the same spiel over and over, and trying to get a laugh out of foreign tourists who may not even understand everything he's saying. (The older Asian couple sitting next to me clearly had no idea, though the man made a video of the entire journey on his phone.)

I texted another friend and told him what we were doing. "You tourists!" he texted back, with a laughing-face emoji.


The guide insisted that we wave at everyone on the bridges as we passed beneath them, and of course the people on the bridges waved back. This was funny because I'd just been walking over one of those bridges shortly beforehand, and a boat passed beneath me and I pointedly did not wave. What a crank I am. I did wave, a bit half-heartedly, from the boat. When in Rome.


From the boat we walked the short distance -- just a few steps, really -- to the Eye and jumped the queue with our VIP tickets. Soon we were in one of the glass pods making the roughly half-hour circuit around the wheel. I wonder what would happen if someone did lean against those doors? Surely they wouldn't just pop open. I didn't test them.

I made a video to give you the London Eye experience:


There are three clips spliced together. We begin with the Houses of Parliament and pan along the north shore of the river; we then look east toward the City of London and gradually southward to Elephant & Castle and west to show an adjacent pod on the wheel; and finally we pick up at Elephant & Castle again and look west along the river toward Vauxhall before ending back at Parliament and Westminster Bridge.

I paired the footage with a song from my iTunes, "How Do You Feel" by Wave System, which was just the right length. Its copyright holder apparently permits its use on YouTube. I had to put some music with the video to eliminate the conversational chatter within the pod, which was fairly loud because there were several little kids. (Don't lean on the doors, kids!)

Anyway, after this adventure I bade adieu to my friends and walked northward through Trafalgar Square (which was closed off for filming of some kind) and Soho all the way to Baker Street. I passed All Souls' Church (top photo) which was decorated with a special cross for Easter week.

And now, Olga wants a walk of her own!

52 comments:

  1. Thank you for the video from up on the Eye , very enjoyable .

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  2. Good to be able to look back at the video and see details that you'd miss at the time

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    1. Absolutely -- I see new things in it every time I watch.

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  3. You made a great job of that video Steve. Thanks for sharing it.

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  4. Oooh! I would love to ride the London Eye. Looks so much better than the thing in Vegas that I paid a fortune to ride. Sometimes it’s fun to be a tourist in your own city.

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    1. We timed the one in Vegas where it was daylight when we got on, but dark by the end.... so it was fun seeing everything light up.

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    2. Do they have a similar wheel in Vegas? I haven't been to Vegas since 1983 -- LOL!

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    3. 1983? You wouldn’t recognize the place! The Vegas High Roller is actually taller than the London Eye, but unless you ride at night like Kelly did, the views are not all that exciting. At night would definitely have been worth it.

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  5. Oh, that video has made me feel very nostalgic for my old home.

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  6. I loved that video! I rode the Eye the last time I was in London. The final shots of Parliament and the red double decker bus are quintessential shots of London! Your video makes me want to go back!

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    1. Yeah, the bus going over the bridge was perfect lucky timing.

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  7. Great video Steve! It makes a nice tribute to your soon to be place of citizenship. Dual citizenship. Best of both strategy is a smart move.
    Thanks for sharing. It's been a while since I did the Thames river tour.

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    1. Here's a secret -- the passenger ferries that run regularly along the Thames are cheaper and just as scenic as the tour boats. You just don't have a guide explaining what everything is.

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  8. Sometimes it' kinda fun to be a tourist in your home town.

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  9. London is HUGE! I think being from Florida gives you a different sense of what being a tourist is. We've certainly been given a million examples of how not to act.

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    1. When you're up high like that you really get a sense of the sprawl. And yes, in Florida, we've all seen negative tourism.

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  10. Your top picture brought back so many memories! I used to work in Portland Place which is to the left past the Church and the BBC. I have walked that bit of street so many times going to Oxford Street. I really enjoyed reading about your river cruise and seeing the views from The London Eye.
    Thank you Steve.
    Wendy (Wales)

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    1. I walked up Portland Place after I took that photo! I like the bar at the Langham hotel across the street -- excellent martinis. (Haven't been there in years, though.)

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  11. The cross on the church rather spoils its architectural splendour.
    I've done the London Eye, so I have no need to look at your clip. But wait. You've put so much effort into it, so I must view it.
    The clip was fabulous. Phyllis at the stovetop just called out to me that I am playing Adele, and did I know who she is? I do, but I don't know her music.

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    1. Ha! Well, it's not Adele, but maybe it sounds like her. I think the cross is actually quite tasteful.

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  12. That was an excellent tourist activity - thanks for the video!

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  13. The last time I was in London was just a couple years after the Eye was built. I didn't ride it nor did I wave at the boats either. I did visit Trafalgar Square.

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    1. I don't know when this whole waving at boats thing started. I can't believe the Londoners of 30 years ago would have had any appetite for that.

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  14. All Souls' Church looks rather like a hot cross bun with that enormous cross!

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  15. I love the video ... it's the only way I will ever see London! Always through someone else's eyes! Saves me buckets of money! LOL

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    1. Yes, this is definitely the cheaper option. :)

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  16. All Souls' Church is an interesting building but I'd rather have seen it without that big white cross. i wonder how London compares to our largest sprawling cities.

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    1. I've posted pictures of the church before. If you search the name they should come up. London's sprawl is somewhat contained by a "green belt" that is supposedly preserving some of the outlying land, though bits of it are being chipped away by inevitable development.

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  17. That video was great and very interesting. I didn't realize that The Eye is like a giant ferris wheel until I looked back at your old post links. I'm always surprised at how spread out London looks. I live in a suburb of Chicago and always feel like a tourist when I visit there even tho, I have lived here most of my life.

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    1. Apparently calling the eye a "Ferris Wheel" is a no-no. I'm not clear on why that is. I guess because you ride in pods that you can walk around in, as opposed to individual seats? Not sure.

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  18. I love your video. I haven't been on the Eye since 2013. I need to do it one more time. That must have been a fun day. I believe I see the BBC headquarters behind All Souls' Church. I visited there on one of my trips.

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    1. It was fun. I was surprised at how much I enjoyed it.

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  19. It's so cool to see that bird's eye view of London and amazing to see how flat London is.
    That sign on the door creeps me out.
    I wonder why the Palace of Westminster was built right on the edge of the river. I assume it had something to do with using the river as a mode of transportation.

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    1. London is actually somewhat hilly, especially up around Hampstead and Highgate (to the north) and south of the city. But yeah, the central area is pretty flat.

      I think people and good were delivered to the palace via river back in the day.

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  20. With my fear of heights, I don't know that the Eye would be a good choice for me. The Space Needle terrifies me enough. I do love seeing the view though!

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    1. I don't mind heights as long as I'm in a confined space.

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  21. The last time I was in London was 2003 and we made a point of doing the Eye. (Is doing the right word? It's not exactly a "ride".) Your video with the accompanying music is wonderful! Like Margaret, I'm terrified of heights, but was okay on the Eye as long as I didn't stand too close to the glass. Plus, it feels stable, unlike something like a Ferris Wheel.

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    1. Yeah, you almost don't feel any sense of motion because it moves so slowly.

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  22. You've done two tourist things I haven't! I suspect your video might be as close as I get to the London Eye for a ride, though those views are tempting. I even got heebie jeebie when you wrote the sentence about leaning on the doors. The music you chose was perfect for this one. But I'd hoped for a river cruise last time and we ran out of time -- gotta save something for next time, right?

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    1. The door signs ARE a bit creepy, but I suppose they have to tell people that. People can be so clueless!

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  23. The Walkie Talkie!!!! I didn't ride The Eye. If I ever make it back, it's on my list. I was in Trafalgar Square just after Russia invaded Ukraine, and there was quite a protest going on, which was interesting to watch. I also enjoyed St Martins of the Field Crypt Cafe. What a great place to sit and have coffee.

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    1. Yeah, I went there several years ago and loved it. It's a fascinating place, with all those old gravestones paving the floor!

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