Jump to content

Recommended Posts

For the last few months we have been plagued with bugs and illnesses and we have not ventured at all out of the local area, however this weekend it looks like we may be germ- and fever-free (fingers crossed) and I am thinking I'd quite like to venture out of of the Dulwich-Camberwell-Herne Hill triangle. But it is going to be wet and cold. Any ideas for places/what to do in or out of London (short day trip)? Ideally I'd avoid museums because from experience on wet and cold weekends they are heaving. Any ideas will be gratefully considered! Also, I am recovering from flu and still get fatigued very easily so a bracing nature walk is out of the questions for the moment (my preferred option for when I desperately need to get out of the area but not suitable for me at the moment, although a gentle stroll somewhere would be lovely). I should probably add that we have a 3 year old so activities need to be suitable for him too. Thank you!
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/27800-what-to-do-on-a-cold-rainy-day/
Share on other sites

Sympathies, I had the flu over NY and am still recovering. My advice is to not go too far as the post flu fatigue is awful, esp with parenting duties on top of that. Can't you take your 3 year old to the cinema? Maybe Greenwich to get out of the triangle? I'm pretty sure they have a Sat morning kids club. Then go to the Cutty Sark (my 3 yr old nephew loved his visit there recently). Not much help, sorry!

We recently discovered a soft play cafe in Balham called Bertie and Boo. 3-yr old boy loved it - has a pirate ship. I heard it can be very busy but first thing in the morning is quiet.


You could then have lunch somewhere in Balham?


Also, how about Docklands Museum? Has a lovely soft play area too. I know you said no museums but we were there last Sunday (rainy) and it wasn't too busy at all.

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

    • He looks like the human version of the 😡 emoji. I'm sure he's lovely in real life (whoever he is).
    • Absolutely, Insuflo I very much doubt that anyone other than football fans would have heard of Dyche, much less his views on false number nines, mobile centre halves  dropping into midfield or diamond formations. But all middle-aged, portly, bald, gruffly spoken football fans from north of the capital who eschew fancy Dan tactics for the traditional, English merits of 4-4-2 shall be deemed knuckle-dragging Neanderthals by the Wokerati and the Metropolitan Elite. They care not what his views are, only that he looks like the sort of person who may have them. It's political correctness gone mad. But they, unlike Dyche, won't have a pub named after them.
    • I'm afraid I have no idea who Sean Dyche is, but I'm sure I could research him (and his views on library refurbishment timetables, if any) on any of the Southwark libraries' internet access computers. Free for any library member!
    • So that suggests the consultations with 'community' are just a tick box exercise where information given cannot be relied on. Not a good look. I hope Renata Hamvas who is the local councillor, as well as licensing, finds a way to stop the wholesale, spreadingmonetisation of an important green space in summer. If they get this it'll end up like Brockwell Park before you know it.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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