As we ventured out on Tuesday, our first stop was the photo processor. Good news! Our photos turned out fine, with no sign of fogging. So our film survived the airport scanners, and we can keep shooting analog photos.
Liverpool.
As in most major cities, there was a lot to marvel at in the city center. But we would have seen none of it if it hadn’t been for the Beatles – our real reason for visiting Liverpool.
The bulk of our afternoon was spent on the Magical Mystery Tour, a guided tour of Beatles sites. The tour bus was identical to the one that was in the movie. (Odd mechanical characteristic: two front axles – both axles turn when the wheel is turned.)
As the bus tooled around Liverpool, our guide told stories of the Beatles’ early days, their upbringing, how they met each other and got started, etc. We got to see the houses where each of them grew up, as well as a handful of places that are the subject of their music.
We got off the bus four times in the course of the 2 1/2 hour tour, and each time it was a quick circus of picture-taking. One stop was at the entrance to Penny Lane, and everyone had their pictures taken in front of the “Penny Lane” street sign.
Where we didn’t stop was the other end of Penny Lane, which was much more compelling, for it was the location of “the shelter in the middle of the roundabout.” This is where Paul wrote the lyrics to the song one day while sitting and waiting for John.
We also got to take pictures of each other at the entrance to Strawberry Fields, and at the boyhood homes of George Harrison and Paul McCartney.
- A wall across from the Cavern Club bears a monument to the Beatles.
- Rozie boards the Magical Mystery Tour bus at one of our many stops.
- The street sign at the beginning of Penny Lane in Liverpool.
- Rozie stands at the entrance to Strawberry Field in Liverpool.
- Ringo Starr was born in a house on this street in Liverpool.
- The house where George Harrison was born in Liverpool.
- Behind the camera, other members of the tour group await their turn to capture photos.
As with our other guided tour (see last week’s update about the Stonehenge/Avebury experience), we would have liked to have spent more time at some of the sites, especially around the Penny Lane roundabout, where we didn’t stop at all.
But on the other hand, if left to our own devices, we would have had a hard time finding any of these places at all, so in the end it was pretty much worth it.






