Saturday, 21 December 2013

Warner Brothers Studio: The Making of Harry Potter

There is probably no better Christmas gift for someone brought up on Harry Potter than tickets to Warner Brother Studios The Making of Harry Potter. Two tickets magically (see what I did there?) appeared in our letterbox 2 weeks ago, and we were so excited to see that Brian's family had given two Potter nerds the best surprise ever! So today we headed out to Leavesden (North London) to see where Harry, Ron and Hermione spent 10 years making the best movies ever.

After overcoming an early obstacle (to get your tickets you have to show ID and Anthony booked our tickets under BrianKobi Gingberts haha!), we were in! We spent the next two hours going through the real sets, seeing the actual costumes and props used, and learning all the behind the scenes secrets of Harry Potter. It was so awesome. A huge thank you to the Gings and Vennitti's for the present, we loved it! I'll let the photos do the talking!
 
Later muggles,
Kobi & Brian

The cupboard under the stairs...

The Great Hall all dressed up for Christmas. 

The Great Hall dining tables, and the first Hogwarts uniforms ever worn by Harry, Ron and Hermione

The hour classes that count the house points for Slytherin, Ravenclaw, Gryffindor and Hufflepuff

The teachers table in the Great Hall, with original costumes
 
Original costumes, wigs and props

Gryffindor dormitory

Ron's bed, with Harry's in the background
The Gryffindor common room - Sirius Black's face appeared in this fireplace!
 
The potions classroom. The props team filled over 1000 jars with 'ingredients' such as herbs and leaves. But when they ran out of herbs to use, they would go to the butcher and ask for bones and off cuts, and preserve them in jars of liquid. Eww. All the potions scenes when Snape was teaching were filmed in this room, which is surprisingly small and actually about 3 steps away from Hagrids hut.
 
Dumbledores office - just outside is shot were glass cabinets full in trinkets all moving around, including the pensieve where he stored his thoughts. The walls were also full of portraits of ex headmasters asleep, eating etc. 
 
This tour definitely made quidditch look less extreme! All the broomsticks are mounted on a machine that moves, against a green screen.
 
The Weasleys kitchen at The Burrow, complete with self chopping knife and self washing frypan.




Ollivanders wand shop, Diagon Alley


Diagon Alley set

4 Privet Drive, Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunias house

While a whole set of Hogwarts doesn't exist, there is a model built which is the size of a huge room. They used this model to do all the aerial shots - you can see the rails on the roof where the cameras roll over. Every detail is to scale (albeit a tiny scale!) and it was covered in snow when we were there. It was pretty amazing!

 
 
Hogwarts covered in snow
 
Choosing my wand from Ollivanders (even though you don't choose the wand, the wand chooses you!)
 
Brian with a butterbeer. If anyone wants to know what it tastes like, it's cold, fizzy butterscotch-flavoured soft drink, and it has this weird creamy layer on the top like when you make an icecream spider. I thought it was gross but Brian loved it. 
 































Sunday, 8 December 2013

Manchester & Liverpool

A few months ago we booked a long weekend away in Manchester and Liverpool, knowing that if we didn't book these things in advance our time in London would fly past and we would realise we hadn't done any of the other cities we wanted to see. Despite booking this ages ago, we felt like time flew by and suddenly it was time to head off. So after a short week at work, we took the train on Thursday morning for four days exploring the north. 
 
First stop was Manchester, and it was the first place where we've been colder than we were in Ireland. While it was only about 4 degrees, which isn't too bad, the wind was ridiculous. On the walk from the train station to our hotel, we could barely move forward with our backpacks on it was so windy. A tiny pebble hit me in the face but it was travelling so fast I thought I'd been shot. We have never been so happy to see our hotel!
After putting on basically the entire contents of our backpacks, we headed out to explore Manchester. There are parts of old/outer Manchester still remaining, which look very industrial and have textile company signs hanging off them by a nail, but it does add to its charm. The inner city, while still having ancient buildings, has been modernised with giant shopping arcades, but none of this mattered to Brian. It could have been a hole in ground and he wouldn't have cared, because Manchester has trams, and Brian has a weird obsession with trams.
Things we loved about Manchester:
  • Brian will tell me off if I don't say 'trams'. So trams. 
  • Manchester has the best German Christmas markets we have seen so far, all in little wooden huts with lights around them. They went on for ages and had lots of cool different things, like real pine wreaths with real fruit and pinecones tied into them. The whole market smelled of chestnuts, wine and the ever present wieners. The only downside of German markets is no matter where you lean, chances are you are going to get mustard on you. We both had mustard on our clothes by the end of the night and we didn't even eat wieners. 
  • Drinking mulled cider and wine at the markets while it was freezing. I had mulled British Apple cider with spices and Brian had mulled white wine with passionfruit and Cointreau. You get it served in a little mug and it was so delicious! Due to the weather it has to be consumed quickly, or it's going to become chilled cider. The markets also sold gourmet alcoholic hot chocolates too - with rum, brandy or baileys in them mmm
  • Visiting Salford Quays, the home of the Manchester United grounds. Even thought everyone in Manchester hates them.
  • We went to some other Christmas markets in Salford too, and they were pretty cool - they had real mini Christmas trees everywhere, live music, and strange foods. Brian is a sucker for any food that is weird, and bought the ostrich burger. Don't think he would get it again.
  • Looking through the Imperial War Museum, and the adjoining UKMediacity where they film heaps of shows like The Voice and Coronation Street.
  • We found even more Christmas markets when we went to see the Manchester cathedral - these ones had the best Christmas decorations, and a seriously rowdy crowd. People were singing Christmas carols in the pubs, but it just sounded like mumble mumble mumble mumble FIVE GOLD RINGS mumble mumble mumble! We wandered through looking at amazing gingerbread houses and drooling over Dutch pancakes, crepes and chocolate fondue.
  • Going to dinner on the famous Curry Mile - over a mile of Indian restaurants. It took awhile to pick a good one, but we ended up going with one called Spicy Hut because the reviews on TripAdvisor were so funny. The manager personally responds to all bad reviews, and in one he wrote 'I am angry you said the meal was too spicy, when you ordered it I said that because you are Asian it would be too spicy for you...' So we had to go there. Our meal was delicious, so the manager was lovely to us!

After two nights in Manchester, we trained it over to Liverpool, home of the four lads who shook the world. Instantly we liked Liverpool as it was so much warmer (about 7 degrees) and had no wind. We headed off to find our accommodation, which was a room in someone's apartment. We have used AirBnB a bit in our travels, and for anyone travelling on a budget, we would definitely recommend it. This weekend was the anniversary of John Lennon's death, and there are always lots of events on that day, so accommodation was really expensive. We went on AirBnB and found a guy who was renting out a spare room in his central Liverpool apartment for £30 per night, about a quarter of what the cheapest hostel was charging. He was absolutely lovely, and had actually lived in Perth for awhile - he had big framed photos of Perth and Rottnest hanging in his living room! So we settled in there and then headed off to check out Liverpool.
Things we loved about Liverpool:
  • The fact that The Beatles music is playing everywhere. 
  • The Albert Dock area, with all it's museums, Beatles gift shops, and art galleries along the water. 
  • Liverpool One shopping district - shopping 'centre' wouldn't do it justice. Luckily we don't have any Christmas shopping to do so we just watched the chaos with a chicken pot pie.
  • Watching an old guy with a guitar busk and make an absolute fortune because he had a cute dog sitting next to his coin bucket. This guy seriously cleaned up - his music wasn't even that fantastic, but everyone wanted to pat the dog and had to put a coin in the bucket to do so. Brian had a pat and threw a coin in. The dog was wearing a jacket which made him look even cooler.
  • The fruit mince pie Krispy Kreme doughnut Brian had should probably get a mention in the things we loved section too.
  • The Christmas decorations were fantastic here too - again there was a big German Christmas market, with lots more chocolate, mulled wine and decoration stalls open.
  • The Cavern Quarter was our next stop - Mathew Street has been the home to so many awesome musical acts, with the most famous obviously The Beatles. We posed with the John Lennon statue in front of the wall of fame then headed down into Mathew Streets' most famous landmark.
  • The Cavern Club hosted 292 Beatles gigs in its time. While the building there now isn't the exact same one that The Beatles played in, it is built to the exact dimensions, in the same spot, using the same bricks as the original, so I'm claiming it as the same. You go down underground, and the cavern is full of memorabilia from all those who have played there, including the Rolling Stones, Oasis and The Who.  When we went in, there was a guy playing live music doing awesome Beatles covers, which was perfect. We had a drink, listened to the music, and just imagined being there when the actual Beatles played. It's only a small venue, and even before they got huge they had people lining up down the street to get in. 
  • Following on from our Cavern Club experience, we signed up to do a full Beatles tour of Liverpool the following day, as a lot of the good landmarks are out in the suburbs and too far for us to walk. So we got onto the Magic Mystery bus and went on a guided tour to see Penny Lane, Strawberry Fields, and the childhood homes of John, Paul, George and Ringo. We also saw where they went to college, where they did their first gig together in a church courtyard, and where Eleanor Rigby is buried. All the while our driver played Beatles songs - we loved the tour, seeing where they all grew up and hearing about how they met. It was interesting hearing about how their legacy lives on in Liverpool too - until it's recent close, Yoko Ono funded the Strawberry Fields children's home, and Paul McCartney has opened a performing arts school in Liverpool and still attends the graduation ceremony every single year to present the diplomas. 
 
So we are on the train home now, facing tasks such as washing and ironing, though we're grateful that it's our flatmates turn at Sunday roast rota so we will come home to dinner ready for us. Manchester and Liverpool were awesome, and we will be humming Penny Lane for at least another week or so.
 
Love me do,
Kobi & Brian

Xxx

Windy Manchester! 
Salford Quays Christmas markets
Real mini pines!
Salford Quays preparing for the ChillSwim, where psychos actually jump in the water!
Best idea for a pub!
Old Trafford - home of Manchester United
UKMediaCity - home of Britains equivalent of Neighbours
Christmas decorations at the cathedral in Manchester
The cathedral
 
Mulled cider and wine at the markets
More decorations
 
German Christmas markets in Manchester
 
Markets
Lights in all the trees

Chilling our drinks, nature-style

To anyone who hasn't considered AirBnB, check it out. Hotels don't give you Santa chocolates!

The busker raking it in thanks to his gorgeous dog

Out for cocktails scouser style! 

The Beatles museum in Albert Dock

John Lennon and Brian


Listening the a guy singing Beatles songs inside the Cavern Club

On the wall on Mathew Street inside the Cavern Quarter
 
Mathew Street, birthplace of the Beatles
When we stopped to take photos of this sign, our tour group was blocking the path which a local was trying to walk his dog along.  A guy in our tour said 'sorry we're in your way!' and the guy with the dog said 'that's okay, we get this 8 days a week'. Legend. 
"And the banker never wears a mac...in the pouring rain....very strange"... this is the bank on Penny Lane

The gates to Strawberry Fields

Strawberry Fields wall

Paul McCartneys childhood home 

The original Sgt Peppers

George Harrison's childhood home is the one with the white hanging flowerpot, behind the car.

 






















Sunday, 20 October 2013

Bath

After visiting Cambridge, we decided it was definitely time to book in more weekend trips. So on Friday after work we caught the train to Bath for a two night stay. Everyone at work said we would love it, and they weren't wrong!

Bath is one of the most gorgeous places we'd ever seen. Every building is made of Bath Stone, which makes the whole place look like a postcard. It reminded me a bit of Monaco, in that the mentality of the founders seems to be 'build a township, make it small, but do it well.' It has everything you need, but still manages to appear very old, and still unspoiled despite the number of tourists.
We set off on one of the Mayor's free walking tours on Saturday morning for two hours, which was more than enough time to walk the entire town of Bath (it's tiny!) Bath was once a medieval walled city, and it eventually expanded to include residential housing outside the township. While the walls no longer exist there is still an obvious divide between the town and the surrounds, and our guide talked us through the history and pointed out all the things that make Bath so damned charming!
 
Things we loved about Bath:
  • How everything is made of stone! When Bath was established, the buildings were made of the stone found it the area. As it became more popular, a guy named Ralph Allen invested all his money into stone quarries. He then got elected as Mayor, and decreed that all buildings in Bath must be made of stone. Good one Ralph! 
  • The Circus block of houses and the Royal Crescent overlooking the rolling hills surrounding Bath. Everything was so pretty. Plus Nicolas Cage owns number 7. 
  • Bath Abbey and the bells that ring out all over the town.
  • The Avon Valley and all the leaves turning yellow. We had some sunshine, but it was definitely cool here this weekend!
  • Seeing the house Jane Austen lived in.
  • Hopping on the purple Scarpers Tour bus and driving out to Stonehenge. On the way are ancient roman burial grounds, the site of lots of freaky crop circles! 
  • Seeing Stonehenge out in the middle of the field. Construction on Stonehenge started 2600BC, which is a ridiculously long time ago! The heaviest stone weighs 45 tonnes - how on earth they moved these, let alone get them ontop of each other 15ft in the air, remains one of the greatest mysteries. To this date no one knows why it was built - some say its a type of sundial/sun calendar, others say a temple for sacrifices or festivals. The complete lack of evidence on Stonehenges' purpose made for a very interesting audio tour - I kid you not what I say one of the lines from the audio guide was 'this rock is pointing out the route of the procession that our ancestors may or may not have taken'. Everything about why it exists it speculative, but there's no denying that it's pretty amazing how they built it. Oh, and the guidebooks don't tell you that it is next to a sheep farm and smells like shit. 
  • Seeing a free range pig farm and free range chicken farm on the way to Stonehenge. So cute! 
  • Visiting the ancient Roman Baths, which were built over 2000 years ago. The main bath has been preserved amazingly well, and while the water is pretty dirty looking, it is still steaming and bubbling away from the heat of the earth. They have done an incredible job restoring it as a museum with an audio guide. We walked through the ruins to the steam rooms, cold water immersion baths and the heated thermal spas. You can't swim in them anymore as they're heritage listed, and the water is untreated so it's pretty bad for you. Brian was disappointed as he brought his boardies along. A private business has cashed in and built fancy day spas using the thermal waters but we didn't go in. We just wanted to see the ancient ones, and they were really awesome.
  • Having a picnic lunch in the park, with gardens full of vegetables and herbs. Brian wants me to write that the rhubarb and strawberry slice we got from the bakery was also worth a mention. 
Thanks for having us Bath, despite some rain we agree with everyone who told us how charming you were. When we were just walking along the river, everyone we passed could be heard saying 'it's just so pretty!' 
Back on the train to London now, grocery shopping and washing await us!
Kobi & Brian
Xxx
 

The ancient Roman baths

Bath streets

So much stone! 
Avon river

The Circus - Nicolas Cage lives at number 7

 

More stone houses

The tiny castle in the hills isn't 3D, Ralph Allen (who owned the stone quarries) built the front of the castle as an advertisement for stone.

The beautiful Royal Crescent. We did not take this photo, when we went it was covered in scaffolding for restoration purposes! This happens to us all the time. 

The Avon River

So pretty
 
Morning riverside walks

Gardens in the town centre

Where we had our picnic lunch

The most beautiful ivy home ever!
 
Stonehenge

More beautiful buildings from our walking tour