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Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens
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contents: Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens, Park Lane, Mayfair, Knightsbridge, St James’s Palace, Queen Caroline, Westbourne River, lake, parks, Great Exhibition, The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, The Who and Queen, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Serpentine lake, Grand Entrance, Carriage Drive, Rotten Row, Serpentine Road and Broad Walk, Duke of Wellington, formal planting,Marx, Lenin and George Orwell,bandstand,Serpentine, a pancake, leasure boating, restaurant, wooden tables and benches, horse riding, SolarShuttle, boathouse, boat, life jackets, Rowing, Tickets, lakeside, ducks, swans, greyleg and Canada geese, cormorants, heron’s and gulls, animals and plants
Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens were originally part of one park and at 625 acres combined are one of the largest green spaces in central London. They’re located in between the most fashionable and wealthiest parts of the city, with the eastern side bordered by Park Lane and Mayfair, the south by Knightsbridge and the north and west by Bayswater, Notting Hill and Kensington.
Henry VIII seized the land from the church in 1536 to use as a royal
park for deer hunting but he kept it for his private use and it wasn’t
until 1637 that Charles 1 opened the park for public use. One of the major landscaping changes to the park took place in 1730 when George II’s wife, Queen Caroline, had the flow of the Westbourne River dammed to create The Serpentine, an 11.3 hectare lake that curve’s through the parks, separating the two.
Hyde Park has always been a place used for major events in London. In its early days duels were fought and horseracing took place there, it was the site of the Great Exhibition of 1851 and in the last hundred years it’s been used for concerts and political demonstrations. The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, The Who and Queen all played major gigs in the park in the 60’s and 70’s and recently it staged Live 8 and the Red Hot Chili Peppers while hundreds of thousands turned up for a Stop the War march in 2003.
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Walking north from here there’s a large statue of a warrior, dedicated to the Duke of Wellington, on the right hand side then Broad Walk leads off in the direction of Marble Arch and Speaker’s Corner. Along this eastern side of the park paths criss-cross each other and there are a lot of mature tree’s providing shade. At the top right hand corner of Hyde Park is Speaker’s Corner where under a law of 1872 it is legal to gather a crowd and address them on any subject without any legal repercussions. The only two subjects not allowed are the Royal Family and overthrowing the state. In its time Marx, Lenin and George Orwell among others have been down to Speaker’s Corner, get along on Sunday’s to hear people get off their chest’s what ever’s bothering them. Looking out on the park from the Marble Arch side the trees give way to a large expanse of open grass and paths, although some young trees have been planted. If you walk west from the Hyde Park Corner entrance along Serpentine Road you’ll pass the bandstand on the right and some garden’s on your left where winter planting was taking place this week. This is really one of the few parts of Hyde Park with some formal planting.
The Serpentine seems very calm, the ideal place to get in a boat and
go for a row on the water Prices for rowing and pedal boats are £4 per half hour/£6 per hour for adults, £1.50 per half hour for kids or £9.99 for two adults and two kids for 30 minutes, £14.99 for an hour, life jackets are provided. Rowing lessons are available if you need them. The SolarShuttle is a pontoon like boat with a curved roof made of 27 glass mudules that collect the sun’s enegry and power the boat. It takes up to 40 people on a winding tour of the lake starting at the boathouse and finishing at the Lido on the other side. Tickets cost £3 for adults and £1.50 for children and it runs from 10am-6pm in summer and 10am-5pm in winter. The area around the lakeside has fairly wide paths and along with all
the other trails through the park this is a particularly popular place
for joggers especially at lunchtimes during the working week and you’ll
see hundreds of runners working up a good sweat during their lunch breaks. The Serpentine attracts a lot of bird life and you’ll see ducks,
swans, greyleg and Canada geese, cormorants, heron’s and gulls among other’s around the edge’s of the lake. On the 10 November park staff are conducting a guided walk of the park
called Autumn in Hyde Park looking at how autumn effects the animals
and plants, its from 1-2.30pm and places need to be booked in advance
by contacting the address on their website. |
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Hyde Park and Kensington
Gardens, Park Lane, Mayfair, Knightsbridge, St James’s Palace,
Queen Caroline, Westbourne River, lake, parks, Great Exhibition, The
Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, The Who and Queen, Red Hot Chili Peppers,
Serpentine lake, Grand
Entrance, Carriage
Drive, Rotten Row, Serpentine Road and Broad
Walk, Duke of Wellington, formal
planting,Marx, Lenin and George Orwell,bandstand,Serpentine,
pancake, leasure boating, restaurant, wooden
tables and benches, horse riding, SolarShuttle, boathouse, boat,
life jackets, Rowing, Tickets, lakeside, ducks, swans, greyleg and Canada
geese, cormorants, heron’s
and gulls, animals
and plants |