

Finally, we boarded the Batobus again for the trip down the Seine on our last evening in Paris.
We walked from Westminster Abbey past Trafalgar Square and St. Martins-in-the-Fields, and then down the Strand until we reached Chancery Lane (instantly recognizable to Anastasia and Julia from their reading of Charles Dickens’s Bleak House, which is centered on the law offices located there). At that point we boarded one of London’s trademark red double-decker buses for the rest of the way down Fleet Street to St. Paul’s Cathedral. The cathedral was closed for admission, but we consoled ourselves with pizzas at the Pizza Express across the street.
By the time we reached Westminster Abbey, admission had closed for the day, so we were not able to visit Poet’s Corner or the other monuments and tombs inside. However, having been able to walk through St. George’s Chapel and see its splendid English Gothic architecture on Wednesday, we were content to look at Westminster Abbey from the outside.
The first day in England went very well. The weather was sunny and relatively warm. We were met at Heathrow by someone from the TASIS school and were taken by bus to Windsor (about 20 minutes away), with some students commenting on how strange it seemed to be driving on the left side of the road and on the sight of sheep grazing next to the road. Arriving in Windsor at about noon, we went through Windsor Castle, seeing Queen Mary's Doll House, the State Apartments, and St. George's Chapel. The students are pictured above in front of St. George's Chapel, along with a couple of soldiers who happened to be coming by at the time.
The photo shows some of our group aboard the plane on the first leg of the journey. Both flights (SF-Toronto, Toronto-London) went very smoothly. The only hitch involved carry-on baggage. There had been some discussion before we left about whether it was a good idea to check baggage or just to carry it on board. As it happened, there was no problem with any baggage checked, but just as we were boarding the plane in SF, the carry-on bags of Mrs. Maximov and Natasha were deemed too large and were taken away to be checked in. But these were not checked through to London, as the others had been, but only to Toronto. So after we got through Canadian customs and found our departure gate in Toronto, Mrs. Maximov and Natasha had to go back and retrieve their bags and check them through to London -- which required their going to another terminal, going through security yet again, and just general hassle for an hour or so. Fortunately, we had plenty of time between flights, and when we got to London 15 hours after leaving SF, everyone had their proper bags.
Eleven students and four adults (two teachers and two parents) will be departing from the San Francisco airport on April 21, 2009 for London. The group will leave London by Eurostar for Paris on April 24th, and will return to San Francisco on April 29th. We will describe our experiences daily, or as often as we can, in this blog.