Cambridge, England: Scenic Punting, Cream Teas and
Ancient Bookshops
by Peter James
When deciding between visiting two of the world's
most famous seats of higher learning – Cambridge or Oxford – travel
writer Jan DeGrass took a friend's advice to take "light and elegant"
over "gloomy and depressing." The day-long visit to Cambridge England is detailed in the
newest travel story at www.Travel-Wise.com
- "Where Smart Travelers Come First!"
"Though academia sets the tone, the (English) city
is so much more than Cambridge university colleges, as we found out
during a full day of sightseeing," writes Jan. The day started downtown
across from an oddly named park: Christ's Pieces.
"Cambridge is an angular city full of
geometrically correct buildings, manicured squares of lawn, green
quadrangles and dramatic spires."
Passing through the gates of King's College leads
to one of the most well-known past-times – punting on the Cam River in
small, flat punts. You can even rent your own punt boat to join the
generations of punters who leisurely ply the waterway as long you avoid
the reserved section of the river reserved for Cambridge's famous
rowing team.
Away from the water, you can find stunning
architecture such as Church of Holy Sepulchre, one of England's four
surviving Norman round churches built after the Knights Templar
returned from the Holy Land.
Outside Cambridge, Grantchester offers its pubs in
a pastoral setting – "cream teams among the apple trees." Notable poets
and authors such as Rupert Brooke, Bertrand Russell and Virginia Woolf
frequented Grantchester's farmhouse teashop – The Orchard.
"For me, the big attraction of Cambridge was not
its splendid colleges or even its thriving outdoor market," says Jan.
"On Trinity Street opposite the colleges, I was
drawn into the orbit of what is billed as the oldest bookshop site in
Britain, home of the Cambridge University Press. You might imagine a
fusty place of ancient tomes – given that scholars first arrived at
this location in 1209 – but this bright, modern, relaxing store, so
seductive to bibliophiles, is crammed with the world’s most erudite
texts on every subject from paleoethnobotany to the birth of the
blues."
Jan concludes that "it is possible to self guide
around Cambridge – sights and shopping are all within walking
distance."
"We took ourselves on a brief tour of St. John’s
College (founded 1511) where students clattered busily across its
quaint Bridge of Sighs modelled after Venice. It was truly
picturesque."
For more details about Cambridge, England, as well
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visit www.Travel-Wise.com - "Where
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Peter James is the marketing director Travel-Wise
Online Magazine. Visit www.Travel-Wise.com to find thousands of
destination reviews by professional travel writers.
Peter James may be contacted at http://www.Travel-Wise.com
or peter@424826.com
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