London calling.
London Walks connecting.
This… is London.
This is London Walks.
Streets ahead.
Story time. History time.
—————————————
And a very good morning to you one and all. Wherever you are. It’s Tuesday, October 22nd, 2024 and we’re in Cambridge for a few minutes.
As it happens, legendary London Walks guide Simon Law and a fortunate few – a group of 14 walkers – are going to be in Cambridge today for rather longer than a few minutes. They’re on our Summer Season 2024 grand finale Explorer Day to Cambridge. So they’ll be there the whole day…back to London about 6.30 this evening.
Anyway, to give them a send-off – and to maybe whet your appetite for our Summer 2025 programme of Cambridge trips – here’s the merest bagatelle from today’s trip.
It’s just a couple of minutes of guiding but it illustrates perfectly why it’s so much better to go with a great guide. It’s an illustration – a crystallisation – of that all-important dictum: there’s a world of difference between looking and seeing. Being with a great guide, well, it’s the historical-cultural equivalent of being fitted out with Superman’s X-ray vision. You see things other people don’t see.
In this vignette the group is across the way from Gonville & Caius College. They’re looking at Senate House. Senate House is, so to speak, the university headquarters. It’s where the graduation ceremony is held. That’s information Simon sets the table with. It’s information that the other tourists who are wandering aimlessly along that lane are clueless about. It’s information that’s like a negative coming up in a darkroom. Suddenly you can see that which wasn’t there. And then once he’s in his stride, Simon makes us see the night climbers and what they’re depositing up on the roof of Senate House. Suddenly, thanks to Simon’s guiding, we’re seeing whacky students jumping from a certain fourth-floor window across an eight-foot gap to the roof of Senate House. And there in the distance we can see the pinnacles of King’s College Chapel, pinnacles begirt with lavatory seats like ill-fitting collars. And topped with Santa Claus hats. And for good measure a car – an Austin 7 – up on the roof of Senate House. No question about it, you go with a great guide you don’t look, you see. There’s a world of difference.
Here’s Simon…
You’ve been listening to This… is London, the London Walks podcast. Emanating from www.walks.com –
home of London Walks,
London’s signature
walking tour company.
London’s local, time-honoured, fiercely independent, family-owned, just-the-right-size
walking tour company.
And as long as we’re at it,
London’s multi-award-winning walking tour company. Indeed, London’s only award-winning walking tour company.
And here’s the secret: London Walks is essentially run as a guides’ cooperative.
That’s the key to everything.
It’s the reason we’re able to attract and keep the best guides in London. You can get schlubbers to do this for £20 a walk. But you cannot get world-class guides – let alone accomplished professionals.
It’s not rocket science:
you get what you pay for.
And just as surely,
you also get what you don’t pay for.
Back in 1968 when we got started
we quickly came to a fork in the road. We had to answer a searching question:
Do we want to make the most money? Or do we want to be the best walking tour company in the world?
You want to make the most money you go the schlubbers route. You want to be the best walking tour company in the world
you do whatever you have to do
to attract and keep
the best guides in London –
you want them guiding for you,
not for somebody else.
Bears repeating:
the way we’re structured –
a guides’ cooperative –
is the key to the whole thing.
It’s the reason for all those awards, it’s the reason people who know go with London Walks, it’s the reason we’ve got a big following,
a lively, loyal, discerning following – quality attracts quality.
It’s the reason we’re able – uniquely – to front our walks with accomplished, in many cases
distinguished professionals:
By way of example, Stewart Purvis, the former Editor
(and subsequently CEO) of Independent Television News.
And Lisa Honan, who had a distinguished career as a diplomat (Lisa was the Governor of St Helena, the island where Napoleon breathed his last and, some say, had his penis amputated –
Napoleon didn’t feel a thing – if thing’s the mot juste – he was dead.)
Stewart and Lisa –
both of them CBEs –
are just a couple of our headline acts.
Or take our Ripper Walk. It’s the creation of the world’s leading expert on Jack the Ripper, Donald Rumbelow, the author of the definitive book on the subject. Britain’s most distinguished crime historian, Donald is, in the words of The Jack the Ripper A to Z,“internationally recognised as the leading authority on Jack the Ripper.” Donald’s emeritus now but he’s still the guiding light on our Ripper Walk. He curates the walk. He trains up and mentors our Ripper Walk guides. Fields any and all questions they throw at him.
The London Walks Aristocracy of Talent – its All-Star team of guides – includes a former London Mayor. It includes the former Chief Music Critic for the Evening Standard. It includes the Chair of the Association of Professional Tour Guides. And the former chair of the Guild of Guides.
It includes barristers, doctors, geologists, museum curators, a former Museum of London archaeologist, historians,
university professors (one of them a distinguished Cambridge University paleontologist); it includes
criminal defence lawyers,
Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre actors,
a bevy of MVPs, Oscar winners (people who’ve won the big one, the Guide of the Year Award)…
well, you get the idea.
As that travel writer famously put it, “if this were a golf tournament,
every name on the Leader Board would be a London Walks guide.”
And as we put it: London Walks Guides make the new familiar
and the familiar new.
And on that agreeable note…
come then, let us go forward together on some great London Walks.
And that’s by way of saying, Good walking and Good Londoning
one and all. See ya next time.