Sunday, October 14, 2007


The Pod Behind Us
Originally uploaded by Loz Flowers
Went on the London Eye today, it's been standing there for seven years and hasn't fallen over once so it should be safe. It did help an alien race try to take over the Earth, true, but which monuments haven't, when you come to think about it?

Anyway, was going with the family, and we pre-booked our tickets, or our 'flight' as they rather implausibly refer to it. I can't recommend pre-booking your tickets enough. It allows you to bypass two of the three long queues at the place.

The first long queue, if you don't pre-book your tickets, is the queue for tickets. The second long queue, is one outside where they keep you back from the Eye. The last long queue is the actual proper boarding queue to get on the Eye itself. Whilst I would agree that the Eye looks lovely, it was obvious that the people waiting to get on were the last consideration and the space deemed necessary vastly insufficient. As it was I got aggravated with the queuing we had to do as pre-paid customers. We had to congregate in an area at the back of the ticket hall (to be fair, normally we'd get a room but today it was out of bounds because of a wedding party), then someone leads us out the door, through all the people milling about in front of the Eye, then if we're lucky enough not to get scattered during this, we go up some stairs and queue for the right pod. We'd gone for the 'guided tour' experience, so we finally got on our pod, past the bag-checkers who didn't bother checking our bags. If any terrorists want, for some strange reason, to take out the Eye, it would seem that while the people that have queued hours on the day to buy tickets get frisked, those who got tickets in advance don't. Just a little tip for your Jihad there. You unspeakable arses.

So, the whole pre-boarding rigmarole was less than fun (and the middle of October surely counts as off-season doesn't it? I'd hate to be a tourist doing this on a hot summer day). But the journey itself was delightful. Obviously, by pre-booking a journey you risk turning up on the day and it's tornados on the Thames and gale-force rain and fog. There was a little mist around when we went up, but it wasn't enough to spoil our view, we could see from Battersea in the West to the Post Office Tower in the North, to Canary Wharf to the East to the... lack of any impressive tall landmarks to the South. Looking at the Eye from underneath, or a distance away, doesn't really prepare you for how high you actually get when you're in the thing. It's not the highest point in London, but it is probably one of the most easily accessible to the public structures, it dwarfs the Monument (which is a bugger to climb too) but if this Wikipedia list is accurate, all the taller places aren't publically accessible.

So yes, thumbs up from the clan Pycock to the London Eye, great views, and they take your photo so that, for ten English pounds, you can have a photo of you and your relatives or friends giving a big shit-eating grin out of the capsule window. Great stuff.

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