Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello - I am meeting my friend this Saturday (she won't come south as she lives in Highbury) so i have to take my daughter with me. She is 11 months old and been walking for ages so won't stay in a buggy for long. So I need somewhere i can take her that she can walk about or at least not scream at me for being in the buggy too long. anyone know of anywhere in or around London Bridge? Much appreciated thanks.
You can spend all day just pottering ever so slowly down South Bank towards Waterloo. Wobbly Bridge, Tate Modern, lots of good benches and walls for eager climbers and no traffic. There's always penty of buskers to stop and stare at, or if the weathers awful just pop her in the buggy and head straight for the Tate.
Giraffe is a restaurant on the South Bank but no matter how child friendly it was I would never go again. The grown up food is extremely over priced and tastes awful. I would go to Wagamama's next door to it, still child friendly with crayons minus the balloons.

Thanks all have been meaning to get back on her all week to let you know how it went!


I took her to the Tate Modern and she loved it! Ran about, up and down (see piccy), kept stopping people to baby talk to them. She seemed to get Picasso (kept pointing at it and wanting to look at it) but not the modern art!! Went to the restaurant on the 7th floor which was a bit pricey but they did have children's menu. She had a lot of fun just throwing everything on the floor. It was a good place to go too as it was really raining on Saturday.


so thankyou to all who suggested it that was fab.

Hurrah! Glad she enjoyed it. For another time Trafalgar Square/ National Gallery is great for little ones too. Again, lots to look at and plenty space to run around, and easy to get to if you get the train to London bridge and then take another train from platform 6 to charing x.
There must be something about Picasso. I remember my then 3 year old studying one closely before turning and asking if he had painted or drawn it. When I told her that it was painted she declared 'That's very good then. I could probably draw it but painting's much harder.'

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • What an extraordinarily selfish post. Even in "the middle of London", believe it or not, there are people with buggies, in wheelchairs, with mobility aids, with visual disabilities, with shopping trolleys, with young children holding their hands,  or who otherwise find it hard to negotiate blocked pavements. "Young people" (I'm sure this isn't just young people) can "enjoy the local amenities" within the boundaries of the "amenities", and without making life difficult for others. Many of those others have probably lived around here long before these "young people" moved in. This is a residential area with shops. It isn't a pedestrianised area in the West End.
    • Posting this here rather than starting another COVID  thread, as there are already two, but admin please move if it's inappropriate. I've never had a bad reaction previously except a sore arm, but I've woken up feeling headachy and achy  and quite unwell. I've had to cancel two appointments,  and my dentist receptionist said this reaction can happen even if you have been ok before, and it  can take three days to go away. Wondering what other people's experiences have been. Obviously it's possible I've got something unrelated to the jab, but it seems a strange coincidence if so.
    • As mlteenie says, it can be open earlier than 'advertised', and often is, but you can't rely on it. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...