Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD
Visited on Monday 26 November 2012
Citymapper app route plan |
Today’s route was
meant to have included a new bus - the no. 9, which runs between Aldwych and
Hammersmith, and would for this journey have taken me from Green Park tube to
Kensington High Street. However, most uncharacteristically, I found myself
arriving in town half an hour early for the pre-culture meeting (1pm at High St
Ken Wagamama with Charlie and Brother Neil) and so I decided to take a walk
through Green Park itself and along the road where the 9 would go. This was in some ways a mistake – it
took me aaaaaages and it was bloody freezing and raining, however I did get to
have a proper look at some of the residences in the area (posh mansion blocks
mainly) and noted the number of very large cars. These vehicular equivalents of gigantic tea cakes might protect
the quaintly uniformed little darlings as you take them on the school run, but
woe betide any unsteady old lady stepping off a pavement at the wrong moment.
So, ten minutes later than the arranged time, I arrived at Wagas feeling like I’d had a few lucky escapes while crossing roads. After a swift nose around Zara with Charlie, who had some choice tops to recommend for the new job wardrobe, we sat down with Brother Neil to enjoy our armadillos of rice, curry sauce and fried chicken (the classic Katsu – number 71 – of course).
Sure gets stuck in |
Over lunch we agreed on the
strategy of dinosoars, the whale and taxidermied birds for our route around the
Natural History Museum. Our walk there took us past the Gore Hotel, the scene
of much revelry following the National Youth Orchestra’s BBC Prom in the summer
(the most expensive sambuccas in the universe can be purchased there); and after
negotiating yet more Chelsea Tractors and passing people on the street dressed
for a splendid afternoon’s grouse shooting, we arrived at our cultural
destination.
Companions in the foreground, diplodocus in the background |
The Natural History
Museum is perhaps most famous for its distinctive Romanesque architecture and
the imposing diplodocus skeleton in its grand entrance hall. The dinosaurs
exhibition contains many other skeletons (Brother Neil’s favourite was the
Triceratops) (here’s a very nice song that makes use of that word in the
opening lyrics), as well as several interactive pieces and
stuff aimed at engaging young people. There is a metal walkway suspended from
the ceiling that takes you through the middle of the room and affords a great
view of some of the bigger pieces. It leads eventually to a rather cool robotic
Tyrannosaurus Rex, though this is slightly spoiled by the same automated woman
who announces the stops on buses telling you every 30 seconds to ‘keep moving
down the ramp’. Following the exhibition round back to the main hall we learned
a number of good facts:
· A Pterodactyl is not a dinosaur, it’s a flying
lizard
· The Tyrannosaurus Rex was so heavy that if it
had fallen over by accident while running at full pelt it probably would have
died
· Meat-eating dinosaurs grew teeth throughout
their life to replace worn out ones
Proceeding to the
awesome life-sized model of the blue whale, we also went past many stuffed
mammals, including a grizzly bear and a real armadillo (not the katsu kind)
that has the brilliant special move of being able to curl up into an almost
impenetrable ball when threatened. We learned a good fact about female deer (they do not have
antlers, with the exception of the reindeer) and we also met a relative of
Sure’s, which pleased his little brass face no end.
Give's a hug |
Real folding armadillo |
Boar and Sure |
Moving on to the birds
section, we enjoyed some models of different dodos (dodi? hm) as well as a
pretty majestic-looking vulture, posed as if in full flight, and an excellent
display of eggs, which was obviously quite thrilling for me (eggs are one of my
favourite things).
Number 6 is a regular hen's egg |
There’s a lot to see
in this museum, and it’s all laid out very logically, as we noted from the
particularly clear and well-designed map. (£1 donation to own). However, owing
to that walking-pace one always adopts in a museum (very slow), we were by this
point quite tired and decided to leave the rest for another time and move on to
the café. This is situated just off the main entrance hall, and is in itself
rather grand.
Brother Neil enjoys a good hall |
Lovely cafe ceiling |
Good selection of cakes |
The array of cakes was impressive and, as Brother Neil
pointed out, there was ‘ample and comfortable seating’. Service was perfunctory but not actually rude, and three cakes plus two pots of tea came to £14.85, so it’s not
cheap. We did feel that given
this, the bendy plastic cutlery on offer was not really acceptable (though it
did give rise to Brother Neil’s sagacious observation that ‘the pen is
mightier than the plastic fork’).
Unacceptable plasticware |
Anyway,
the teapots were a nice shape so we weren’t too miffed, and the surroundings
were very pleasant indeed. Regarding the cake and tea:
1) Millionaire’s
Shortcake with marbled chocolate top (Charlie)
“I’m really pleased
with it. We have well-proportioned elements (biscuit, caramel and chocolate
topping), the slice is a manageable size, it’s very aesthetically pleasing, and
the caramel is chewy but not too gloopy. 8.5 out of 10.”
2) Chocolate fudge
cake (Brother Neil)
“Mmmm, it’s dense.
Good sponge-to-filling ratio. Generally speaking it’s a good bake with
consistent edges. I’d give it 8 out of 10.” This was updated about 15 minutes
later however: “I have detected unexpected dryness towards the end. I’d like to
downgrade it to a 7.”
3) Traditional
Bakewell tart (thepateface)
Disappointingly dry,
but good flavours, and again well-proportioned elements. The texture does let
it down though. 5.5 out of 10.
4) The tea (all of us,
two pots being enough to go between three)
Brother Neil poured
first and there was some minor drippage, though this was not the case when
Charlie poured from the other pot. It was duly noted that Brother Neil’s
technique might have been the cause of the issue. The tea itself was delicious
and we were pleased with the ponciness of the teabags – they are the sort that
you can use to put loose tealeaves into, thusly permitting their appropriate
movement within, but not their invasion of, the water and leading to a nigh-on perfect brew. Very
refreshing!
Poncey but very pleasing teabag device |
The SHOP was the final
part of the visit, and we were impressed by its size. It contains the usual
items – stuffed toy dinosaurs, jigsaws, branded stationery, little polished
rocks and lots of books. The postcard selection wasn't huge, but we all
bought some very nice ones, and I also bought a lovely little book about pigs. By
chance I flipped it open at page 72, on which there was a photo of a tin of
Spam. Sure was not so pleased about that.
Following this very
nice diversion and a general agreement that the Natural History Museum is a
really good place to visit, we decided to conclude our excursion with a glass
of wine at a pub near the tube station. By this time it was dark and we were
delighted with the fairy lights in the trees outside the museum, and a
pleasantly lit-up carousel. All very nice.
Outside the museum |
Owing to the
tiredness, I decided just to sit on the Piccadilly line all the way from South
Kensington to Finsbury Park, even though this wasn’t the quickest route home.
It was a strange journey. Firstly there were three 6- or 7-year-old girls
dancing around the pole in the middle of the carriage and making a right old
racket. Two of them were slight and very active, and the other was quite a bit
larger. It was a rather sad moment when the two skinny ones pointed out that
the other was ‘too fat to climb up the pole, cos you’re too heavy’ and her Dad
had to step in and say ‘No, no, she’s just tall’…
the poor girl stood back and let the other two get on with it, wearing a really
quite heart-breaking, crushed half-smile on her face. Then a gigantic woman got
on and sat beside me, muttering aggressively to herself and digging me
repeatedly in the ribs. I tried to ignore it, but it all got very awkward when
we pulled in to Covent Garden station – she ended up missing her stop because
she couldn’t un-wedge herself from the seat in time and, worst of all, the
little girls started pointing and laughing at her. Kids can be pretty cruel I
suppose.
After a short wait at
Finsbury Park, the good old 106 brought me home. This is a bus route operated
by especially advanced drivers, the ones who have the special skill of judging
that exact moment when you’re halfway down the stairs and you’ve lifted your
hand off the upper rail to grab the lower one – at which point they slam on the
brakes. It’s so annoying that it’s impressive. So I ended the day with what is likely to become a small
bruise on my forehead, but very happy nonetheless. Thanks to my companions for a
wonderful start to the culturecake project – Brother Neil, Charlie and Sure the
pig.