View allAll Photos Tagged Queue,
I was pretty surprised when after two hours of walk I arrived on the top of the pulpit rock. There were a lot of people in queue waiting for their turn to have a picture.
Not connected to topic, the waiting room features the take ticket - wait system. Funy aspect here is the lady that can be seen in hallway. she was one of the 9 people standing in line with tickets in hand and waiting for her number to appear on top of one of the windows. Somewhat defies the point in having a waiting room in first place.
theatre goers opposite the sadlers wells in roseberry evenue show that queueing is not quite dead in today's london, though it may well be in terminal decline.
The foyer area of the building acts as an interactive reception area... Guests can watch television (unsurprisingly), or have their pic taken against this green wall to add themselves to a famous BBC scene, amidst other activites... On Doors Open Day, this place was heaving!
currently i'm reading into thin air by jon krakauer, which is an amazingly interesting and at the same time extremely terrifiying story about the 1996 mt. everest disaster where eight climbers died on the mountain in a storm. krakauer himself was in one of the expeditions that were up there at the time, which gives it an even more scary touch because it's a first hand written story..
Originally posted to the Guess Where London group on 05-03-07.
A queue of buses in Cockspur Street waiting to enter Trafalgar Square on a dark wet evening. The nearest bus is London General E123 on route 88.
woke up this morning and the kids had made a queue of toys at the foot of our bed to slide down a tray
The way these guys were standing in line (waiting for the hairdressers) and the spacing made me the think of the queue scene in "The Full Monty". Something had clearly grabbed their attention.
The queue for daytrippers to get back to the US typically involves at least a couple of hours. Fortunately there's lot to take in locally as the queue snakes forward.