Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Cutty Sark

The world’s last remaining tea clipper was launched  from Dumbarton in Scotland in 1869.  At the time, the technical sophistication of the Cutty Sark made her a symbol of British Maritime power as she sailed the South China seas with cargos ranging from whisky to gunpowder.  Bringing tea from China and wool from Australia, her sleek shape and narrow hull enabled her to achieve a speed of 20mph and cover nearly 300 miles a day, unheard of at the time. She was thought of as the ‘Poster Girl’ of her time, being likened to Concorde or theSpace Shuttle in current times.
A photograph of the Cutty Sark taken by Captain Woodget, courtesy of The Merchant Navy Association
The photograph was taken in the open sea with a camera supported on a plank of wood fixed between two of the ship's boats.
Today, this spectacular national treasure was visited by Her Majesty the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh to officially relaunch the Cutty Sark after a £50 million restoration project. The project suffered a devastating fire in 2007, but fortunately large parts of the ship had been taken off-site for restoration work so much of the original vessel still remains. In a few places where the originals were too badly damaged such as the top deck, the conservation teams resorted to creating a special composite material which looks just like the original deck.
Photo:  Getty Images
Prince Philip played a key role in getting the Cutty Sark brought back to Greenwich in the 1950s and has taken a keen interest in the restoration project. The work has been funded by The Heritage Lottery Fund along with large donations from benefactors, contributions from a very wide variety of members of the public,  along with pocket money donations from children who are delighted to see this major part of history being preserved.

Photo;  Getty Images
The ship is now ‘floating’ in its dry dock with a state of the art visitor centre all around the vessel creating a new Thames landmark on this World Heritage Site.


Sunday, 22 April 2012

The 32nd London Marathon


Former Olympic medallists, John Disley and the late Chris Brasher, were the co-founders of the London Marathon.  Having been exhilarated by the experience of the New York Marathon, they started on a long journey of discussions to discover whether it could be possible to stage a similar race in London.

Finally, 7,747 people ran the first London Marathon on 29 March 1981.  With a three year sponsorship  deal from Gillette worth £75,000, the race was a great success with thousands of people lining the streets and full TV coverage on the BBC. 

Alessia Pierdomenico/Reuters
The popularity of the event has continued to increase over the years with a record number of 36,550 people finishing in 2010. It attracts a huge variety of runners from around the world, many choosing to wear fancy dress, some in bizarre and restricting costumes and more than three quarters competing for charitable causes.  But it still remains a serious athletic event, one of the five in the World Marathon Majors.
As one of the biggest running events in the world, the London Marathon holds the Guiness World Record as the largest annual fund raising event in the world;  since 1981 it has raised over £450m for charity.

The race starts in Greenwich Park, follows a route east to Woolwich, then turns west towards Greenwich, past the Cutty Sark and across the River Thames at Tower Bridge.  Canary Wharf is the next point then round the Isle of Dogs, before heading west again towards the Embankment, through Birdcage Walk and past Buckingham Palace before reaching the finishing line in The Mall


The ladies and men's elite winners ran the 26.2 miles in just over two hours and Price Harry was out on the finishing line to present their medals.  The race has a staggered start with the elite athletes and wheelchair competitors leaving before the main group of over 37,000 runners.
Photo:  Getty Images
Well done to all those people who took on the 26.2 mile challenge in the world's largest fund raising event.
Photo: Getty Images

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Inspire a Generation!


100 days to go until the opening ceremony and Chairman of the Games Seb Coe was at Kew Gardens this morning to unveil a giant set of Olympic rings, made up of over 20,000 flowers visible to planes landing on the Heathrow flight path.

Photo: LOCOG
The venue for sailing events in Weymouth, Dorset has built a giant sandcastle featuring the Olympic rings to celebrate and the Coldstream, Scots and Welsh Guards were in perfect formation on Horseguards Parade, marking the 100 days to go. 
Photo: LOCOG
A further announcement that more than 60 big screens will be erected around the country to give everyone across the United Kingdom a chance to watch the London 2012 events, free of charge, will be warmly welcomed.  The excitement of the opening day of the Games will be experienced by cities across the country, with a flypast from the Red Arrows aerobatic display team performing their Big Battle formation
Photo: MOD
British Embassies around the world have arranged events to mark the 100 days to go, with 100 metre races in Berlin, at the 1984 Olympic Stadium in Sarajevo and in the Palace Square in St. Petersburg.  

With 3 weeks until the torch is lit in Greece, 4 weeks until it arrives in the UK and 10,000 temporary toilets to set up, the final countdown is on!   The buzz of excitement is building across London as we prepare to welcome the world.





Tuesday, 10 April 2012

The University Boat Race


The first race took place in 1829 following a challenge between two old school friends, Charles Merrivale and Charles Wordsworth and later became an annual event, which has been rowed every year except during the two World Wars.

In 1845 the venue moved from Henley to the four and half mile course from Putney to Mortlake in South West London.  Here the two crews of nine extremely fit young men and women of dark blues from Oxford and light blues from Cambridge, take part in a unique sporting event, watched by thousands on the riverbank and millions on TV around the world.  The actual date and time changes from year to year depending on the tides, but it is normally around the same time as Easter. 
This years boat race has hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons.  The two boats usually flash pass in a couple of seconds and once the cheering is over, the enjoyment of boat race day for onlookers by the riverbank is in the hosts of parties which are held in pubs, restaurants and homes along the course of the Thames.  The river is then left to calm from the massive following traffic of boats associated with the race before the rest of the races are held.
However this year, just as we could see the two boats emerging round the corner masses of loud sirens filled  the air, blue lights began flashing and helicopters swept overhead.
Some people in the group had been listening to the commentary on their phones and were able to keep us up to date with the antics of a stupid, smirking, anti-elitist protester who had swum in-between the boats and very narrowly escaped being whacked around the head with the force of one of the oars.  He was removed, arrested and the race was re-started. Unfortunately, moments later the Oxford crew clashed with Cambridge resulting in one of their oars snapping half way down.  They carried on, the oarsman continuing with his stump, but obviously at a disadvantage, so Cambridge soon pulled away and won the race.

It was a very subdued win as Alex Woods, one of the Oxford crew, collapsed with exhaustion as the effects of having waited about in the cold wind before the restart sent his body into metabolic chaos.  Being at the end of the boat, it was at least five minutes before anyone noticed he was unconscious and not just relaxing. Once alerted, the rescue boats were soon on the job, swiftly getting him off to hospital and I’m pleased to say he is reported to have made a full recovery. 



Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Madame Tussauds welcomes a new royal couple


Photo:Daniel Deme/ WENN.com
Madame Tussauds is the most famous waxwork museum in the world, where  you can stand next to a perfect life-size replica of historical characters, celebrities, statesmen, royalty and notorious criminals.

Marie Tussaud grew up in Paris in the 18th century and became an assistant to Dr. Philippe Curtis, a famous wax modeller who was ordered to make death masks for many of the victims of the French revolution. Madame Tussaud had the gruesome task of making the death masks for King Louis 16th and Queen Marie Antoinette, which are still on display.  Madame Tussaud opened her attraction in London over 180 years ago, featuring a figure of King William IV.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have now taken their place in Madame Tussauds in a pose and setting taken from the day of their engagement announcement. The now world famous blue Issa dress was specially recreated by the fashion label for the  exhibit, and the replica sapphire and diamond engagement ring, which once belonged to Prince William's mother the late Diana, Princess of Wales, is proudly on show. 

The waxworks have cost approximately £150,000 each and have been created by a team of more than 30 experts over four months.  However, all this hard work is sure to be popular with the public which has regularly contacted the waxworks museum to request the Royal couple be featured and the museum is expecting the queues to be even longer at the Baker Street attraction.