There is so much to see and do, - depending on what sort of thing you enjoy. I like to walk in Regents Park, see the changing of the Guard, and walk around pall Mall and Horseguards parade. I like to get down to the river to see the Houses of Parliament, HMS Belfast (old battle cruiser moored on the river) maybe have lunch in the Dickens pub in St Katherines Dock, see Tower Bridge and the Tower, and then pop down to river to Greenwich. There you can see the National Maritime Musuem (the old Royal Naval College) and in Greenwich Park adjacent thereto you can see the Observatory and the Zero line. I think the Cutty Sark clipper has been rebuilt since the fire last year. Just South of Greenwich, if you walk though Greenwich Park you will come to Blackheath, and you can have lunch in the Hare and Billet pub there. Blackheath is supposedly where the first game of golf was played in England (by King James I). (I think its called Blackheath because there was an enormous grave there to burry all the people who died in the Plage in 1664. The grave stretched all the way to Gravesend in Kent.)
There is so much to see and do, - depending on what sort of thing you enjoy. I like to walk in Regents Park, see the changing of the Guard, and walk around pall Mall and Horseguards parade. I like to get down to the river to see the Houses of Parliament, HMS Belfast (old battle cruiser moored on the river) maybe have lunch in the Dickens pub in St Katherines Dock, see Tower Bridge and the Tower, and then pop down to river to Greenwich. There you can see the National Maritime Musuem (the old Royal Naval College) and in Greenwich Park adjacent thereto you can see the Observatory and the Zero line. I think the Cutty Sark clipper has been rebuilt since the fire last year. Just South of Greenwich, if you walk though Greenwich Park you will come to Blackheath, and you can have lunch in the Hare and Billet pub there. Blackheath is supposedly where the first game of golf was played in England (by King James I). (I think its called Blackheath because there was an enormous grave there to burry all the people who died in the Plage in 1664. The grave stretched all the way to Gravesend in Kent.)