Roscrea Travel Ltd

Roscrea Travel Ltd Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Roscrea Travel Ltd, Travel Agency, castle Street, roscrea, co. Tipperary.

10 Actually Free and Interesting Things To Do in London 05/16/2016 03:38 pm ET | Updated 2 days agoAnita HendriekaI’m a ...
19/05/2016

10 Actually Free and Interesting Things To Do in London
05/16/2016 03:38 pm ET | Updated 2 days ago

Anita Hendrieka
I’m a traveller & travel blogger since 2012 giving readers useful tips and advice from budget to solo travel and everything in between!
London can be an expensive city if you head to all the tourist traps. I am the master of finding something free to do in this city (could be to do with the fact I usually have no money in my pocket and I’m Dutch which means I’m basically a tight a**e!). Here’s a great guide to London that’s absolutely FREE! All you need is a travel card that will reach London Zones 1-6 and you are set!



1. Hampstead Pergola and Hill Gardens | Tube station: Hampstead

The pergola was built in 1906 and was one of Lord Leverhulmes ideas. He wanted to build a legacy, so decided that the pergola was a great idea. Over the years there were many extensions of this fantastic structure but sadly after his death the Pergola was forgotten. This place is now overgrown by wild flowers and vines and looks absolutely amazing. It has such a eerie feeling to it and I wouldn’t of thought this secret place would still exist in London.

2. Listen to the protests in the speakers corner in Hyde Park | Tube station: Marble Arch

I went to Hyde Park a couple of months ago and wondered why everyone was yelling about different issues, and then I found out that it’s a speaker’s corner. Every Sunday, people come here that want to voice an issue and debate with one another. It’s been happening every Sunday since 1866!


3. Postmans park |Tube station: St Pauls

This park is simply amazing. It was opened in 1880 and is dedicated to all the people who died while trying to save someone else’s life. You can read the plaques on the wall about how they died, and pay your respects. Spend a few moments remembering these amazing people who are no longer with us. They deserve remembrance. You can get here by taking the tube to St Pauls. It’s only a couple of minutes walking distance from the station. It’s a sanctuary amongst a concrete jungle.

4. See the view of the city at Primrose Hill | Tube Station: St John’s Wood

A great view of the beautiful city of London is Primrose Hill. Buy some food from the markets and come up here to enjoy the afternoon, eat and drink a bottle of wine! It’s not far from the London Zoo so if you are heading that way then make sure you stop over!



5. Kyoto gardens at Holland Park | Tube station: Holland Park

If you fancy a peaceful afternoon then head to Holland Park where you can sit, relax and enjoy the Kyoto gardens. It’s only a short walk from the Holland Park tube station, you could definitely spend a sunny afternoon here!

6. Little Venice | Tube Station: Warwick Avenue

Little Venice is so dazzling! The bright colour of moss growing on the canal might not sound glamorous but it does look amazing. I suggest you start from Warwick Avenue tube station and walk along the canal until Paddington station. You will get to see some very quaint house boats and take some great pictures. It’s not quite Venice but thumbs up for trying!



7. Goodwins Court | Tube Station: Leicester Square

It is a little hard to find but it is the cutest, tiniest alleyway I have seen. It looks like a set out of Harry Potter with old school lanterns hanging all the way down. This alleyway is off St Martins Lane , make sure you look carefully because there is no sign saying the street name! It’s strangely quiet as well. My friend and I just sat there in silence and we couldn’t hear the chaos of London that surrounded us.

8. Check out the Markets throughout London

London is famous for it’s bustling markets, there are so many to choose from. If you’re in London on a weekday then check out the Camden Markets, Covent Garden and Brixton Markets. On a Saturday check out the Borough Markets and Portobello Road Markets. On a Sunday you have to check out Upmarket and Bricklane markets in Shoreditch. They all cannot be missed!



9. Oldest street sign in London - Tavistock St | Tube station: Covent Garden

Tavistock Street has a hidden gem that not many people know about. It is home to the oldest recorded street sign in London dated back 1636! It’s very hard to find though so keep your eye out. It is located at the very top of the buildings numbered 34-38. You will see a blue plaque at number 36 saying ‘In 1821, Thomas de Quincy(1785-1859) wrote ‘Confessions of an English O***m Eater’. When you see this you’re not looking high enough! Stand on the other side of the road and you will see a white plaque. It’s very hard to see in direct sunlight and quite hard to get a photo of but mind-blowing when you see it and think about when this was dated back to.

10. Do a free walking tour

Yes, there are still free walking tours these days! I can recommend doing the Free London Walking Tours. There is more than one tour to choose from so make sure you check out their website.

There are always free things to do in a city you just have to do a little research and be prepared to get lost. As my mother used to say “The best things in life are free” and I have to say I agree with her!

Anita Dykstra is a travel blogger at Anita Hendrieka, She blogs about her adventures around the world and how you can travel around the world on a budget.

Follow Anita’s adventures on Instagram!

Follow Anita Hendrieka on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AnitaHendrieka

Senaste tweets från Anita Hendrieka (). Travel blogger, Two homes - NZ and UK, Adventure seeker and inspiration admirer Read about my adventures and gather tips and advice on my blog! . United Kingdom / New Zealand

https://youtu.be/a-kjP8qQENk
19/05/2016

https://youtu.be/a-kjP8qQENk

Along ancient routes, in a gorgeous landscape of sea, coast and mountains, we immerse you in the culture, history and mythology of this great region, while d...

See Splendor of the Seas arriving in Dublin Port. GREAT VALUE IN CRUISES THIS WEEK FREE DRINKS PACKAGE...!
05/05/2016

See Splendor of the Seas arriving in Dublin Port. GREAT VALUE IN CRUISES THIS WEEK FREE DRINKS PACKAGE...!

The longest ship ever to visit Dublin Port, the 333m MSC Splendida, returned to the capital prior to its departure for Cork.

07/04/2016

At Wizarding World of Harry Potter, magic comes to life, or as close as it gets
Wizarding World Hollywood
A young visitor in Ollivander's Wand Shop learns quickly that "The wand chooses the wizard" at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios Hollywood. (Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)
Mary McNamara Mary McNamaraContact Reporter
In hero-quest terms, the recovery of the Sorcerer's Stone was Harry Potter's first big win, even though he didn't get to keep it. By the time Harry woke up after his first battle with You Know Who, the stone, with all its life-extending and gold-producing properties, had, in fact, been destroyed.

Not that it matters. As it turns out, he didn't actually need Nicolas Flamel's famous bit of alchemy. No one has a more golden touch or a better shot at immortality than J.K. Rowling's young wizard.

Just watch the faces of those entering Universal Studios' new Wizarding World of Harry Potter Hollywood on a preview day, ahead of the official April 7 opening. Although Hogwarts Castle is now technically a part of the L.A. skyline, the Wizarding World is not immediately visible from the park entrance. Which makes the first sight of its gorgeously gothic arches, just past and set back a bit from Shrek 4-D, even more arresting.

As in "aresto momentum visitors." Hogwarts Castle, home to Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey, which is possibly the best dark ride ever, beckons from the far end of the new land and quaint butterbeer carts tempt, as do the windows of the sweets shop Honeydukes and the chance to huddle, as Harry, Hermione and Ron did, over shepherd's pie at the Three Broomsticks.

But no one is hurrying.

Even those so eager to "attend" Hogwarts that they are wearing heavy robes under a ruthless Southern California sun slow to a stop just outside the arched entrance to the re-created village of Hogsmeade. Smartphones at the ready, some take selfies, but others just stand for long minutes at a time, gazing at the fictional village's swinging sign, the snow-capped peaked roofs, the tilted chimneys, cobbled streets and vaguely Dickensian shop windows.

Taking in the steaming locomotive of the Hogwarts Express, the carts and stores and ambient wizards, witches and villagers strolling by (some of them Wizarding World staff, others just serious Potter fans), people of every age and sort peer, as if through a magical doorway into a dream.

The shops in Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios Hollywood
L.A. Times theme park blogger Brady MacDonald explores the shops at the new Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios Hollywood.
Which is exactly where they are. J.K. Rowling's dream, shared first by millions of readers and then, filtered through the enormous talent of those who produced the eight-movie franchise, millions more.

Hogsmeade and Hogwarts are now iconic aspirational destinations, like Paris or Harvard. Indeed, any college with the slightest medieval flair will inevitably invoke the School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in its promotional material, along with the promise of quidditch matches.

Frankly, you'd think we'd be sick of it by now, all the spells and magical creatures, the recipes for Golden Snitch cake pops on Pinterest, the Gryffindor scarves and earthworm-flavored jelly beans. The children who came of age waiting overnight at bookstores for the next installment are adults now, some with children of their own, and all manner of fictional teen heroes and heroines — "The Hunger Games," the "Divergent" series, now SyFy's "The Magicians" — have sprung up to compete for the next generation's devotion.

But Harry, Hermione and Ron continue to prove irresistible, endlessly enlisting young recruits while retaining the originals. I visited in the company of a 9-year-old, a 10-year-old, a 13-year-old and a 16-year-old as well as several adults, all of whom entered and left in the same state of wide-eyed wonder.

Here it is, magic come to life, or as close as it gets, conjured into obsessively detailed, interactive splendor by many of the same designers who worked on the films. Only this time, instead of partial sets, fleshed out with camera work and green screen, they got to build real streets, actual shops and taverns, even, in the queue leading to the Forbidden Journey, the Gryffindor common room. There's Hagrid's hut and his famous motorbike, alongside the line for the small but zippy roller coaster, Flight of the Hippogriff.

Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios
With two rides instead of three, the Hollywood version may occupy less landscape than the original Wizarding World in Orlando, Fla., but the landscape is a better fit.

Universal's hilltop perch makes this Hogsmeade seem even more rural and isolated, angled between the Simpsons' Springfield and the Studio Tour. Even its most noticeable park neighbor — Water World — is tonally appropriate. The faux-rickety tower visible over the back wall, and the flames the show sends into the air could easily exist in the world of Harry Potter.

A world that remains as tantalizing as it was almost 20 years ago, when the first book was published.

Here are the chocolate frogs, the Owl Post, the bottles of Gilly Water. There's Mr. Weasley's car and Gladrags Wizard Wear. Myrtle playfully moans in the restrooms, the Frog Choir shows up at regular intervals, as do dancing Hogwarts, Beauxbatons and Durmstrang students, preparing for the Triwizard Tournament.

In Hollywood, Ollivanders Wand Shop — where every few minutes a wand chooses a lucky wizard — has twice as much space as the one in Orlando. But even on a pre-official opening day, the line is just as long, and the gift shop into which you are guided is just as cramped. Like every store in the land, however, it's something to see, with its stacks of wands for every character, many in regular and interactive varieties.

Those interactive wands, which go for $50, come with a map to certain windows at which actual spells (explained via brass plates in the cobblestones) can be used to perform "magic." Adding to the verisimilitude, but also, potentially, child/parent frustration, many are quite difficult to do. (Fortunately, helpful staff members are on hand to help.)

The Three Broomsticks restaurant manages to seem both cozy and spacious, its high vaulted ceilings groomed to look like the two-story inn (watch for the dancing broomstick and shadow Dobby), its stone floors and huge fireplaces giving way to the Hogsmeade Pub next door, where beer of all varieties, including butter, is available. Much of the food is pub-heavy (which should make this a killer winter holiday destination), but there are fruit plates and salads, which are large enough to feed two, and the kids' meals are a bargain, with big portions and lots of grapes.

Of course, all roads lead to Hogwarts Castle, home to possibly the most immersive, amazing and utterly convincing dark-ride/queue ever invented.

Winding through all parts of the Castle, the path to the Forbidden Journey passes all manner of narrative touchstones, beginning with the Mirror of Erised. As Harry and other main characters propel you along with the promise of seeing a quidditch match, you move through Professor Sprout's greenhouse, past the enormous golden griffin into Dumbledore's office, through the hall of moving portraits and into the defense against the dark arts classroom.

Then, having greeted the chatty Fat Lady and read the iconic animated newspapers (the ultimate example of digital media), you enter the Gryffindor common room before climbing into the ride that sends you sailing alongside Harry, Ron and Hermione as they fly through various adventures.

The detail at every turn is exquisite, the revelations seemingly endless — there are the earmuffs that you need to cope with mandrakes, the pensieve, the sad stained glass window, the sword of Gryffindor, all looking exactly like they did in the films (in some cases because they are actual props from the films). While the length of the queue itself can be daunting — though there was no line during an early "soft open," two hours will not be unusual after the official opening — it is so evocative and fascinating that even those not forced to should take their time.

Or go on the ride multiple times, as we did (though folks prone to motion sickness should probably space things out). Not only is this as close as any of us will get to actually flying on a broomstick, it's a chance to spend a little more time with your favorite young wizards, whom you didn't realize you would miss until the books and the movies stopped appearing with reassuring regularity.

For fans like my youngest daughter, who discovered Harry and company only after the Potter universe was complete, the Forbidden Journey and the Wizarding World itself offer the same sense of boundless discovery that fueled all the late-night bookstore parties and midnight premieres.

The story isn't over, not really, and maybe it never will be, what with the new play, and the upcoming prequel movie and the expansion of the Orlando park.

Even after all this time, even for someone who has been to the park in Florida, who has read the books with three children, sat through the films a dozen times each, and recently made 30 floating candles, three dozen chocolate frogs and a forest of Golden Snitch cake pops for her youngest Potter fan's birthday, even for me, Rowling's wizarding world is just as magical as it ever was.

[email protected]

01/04/2016

WHAT DAY IS IT.....????

NEW DEVELOPMENT FOR CELEBRITY ECLIPSE.MOO-VERS JOIN THE LAWN CLUB.We are excited to announce two Jersey cows have been a...
01/04/2016

NEW DEVELOPMENT FOR CELEBRITY ECLIPSE.
MOO-VERS JOIN THE LAWN CLUB.

We are excited to announce two Jersey cows have been appointed as lawn keepers on-board Celebrity Eclipse when it returns to Southampton on 30 April 2016. The cows 'South' and 'Hampton', will be responsible for maintaining the real grass lawn as well as producing fresh milk and cheese for guests during their cruises throughout Europe.

A new appointment, head of cows Ali Forlop, says: We are extremely proud to be the first cruise line to produce and serve fresh milk and cheese on-board Celebrity Eclipse and are very excited to for our guests to experience this.

To celebrate their first day on the ship, 30 April 2016, guests will be able to enjoy a cheese tasting with the new employees on the lawn.

Address

Castle Street, Roscrea
Co. Tipperary

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Roscrea Travel Ltd posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Roscrea Travel Ltd:

Share

Category