In a bar: Not expected. We Don’t. If you are feeling especially generous you can offer to buy the barman a drink (he gets the money later), but this isn’t a common occurance.
Restaurants: betwenn 10-15%. However check the bill, quite a lot of places include service (usually at 12.5%), and the rotters have a habit of including the services and then leaving the tip space blank.
Other people you may wish to tip: Taxis (not compulsory by any means). Porters like the luggage porter. Barbers/hairdressers. Lap dancers
By and large Britain doesn’t have a tipping culture - certainly nothing like the states.
Thanks - great info. Although, if I ever patronize a lap dancer, I’m thinking I’m the one who’s been tipped - on my head. Unless they have male lap dancers that I’m not aware of?
Well that’s no fun, is it? Last night I was so bored that even the idea of calling Zanis, the Greek guy from the London Bridge, didn’t seem so horrible, if only because it would give me something to do. :eek: The craziness passed quickly, luckily.
D’ats the bunny. About to head down there for lunch actually.
I know it - i’m just down the road in Kingsway.
The Ship Tavern - it got refurbished about 6 months ago and lost some of its charm. Still good as a bog-standard boozer though, and serves a cracking pint of Kronenbourg.
Prinny Lou on Saturday sounds alright. Don’t think I got anything planned. Or if I did, it would be about 10 minutes walk away from there in The Ship. But not the one mentioned above.
Much as I hate to interupt a thread about pubs to offer some advice…
The OP should buy a copy of Time out - comes out tomorrow moring. It’s a seven dat listing guide for the city covering general tourist stuff and exhibitions, comedy gigs, Sport, Music, film and theatre. Best £2.20 you’ll spend.
Duly noted, and definitely something I think I’ll invest in.
As for time, any time works for me, so if everyone else can reach a consensus of whatever sort, I’ll just go with that. Therein lies the big advantage of solo travel
tellme - you may want to head down to the London Assembly Building (the modern building that looks like its about to fall over on the south side of the thames near Tower Bridge). They’ve got a (free) photographic exhibition on that i strongly recommend seeing - i saw it on saturday.
That would be 30 St Mary Axe, formerly (until people got bored of it) nicknamed “The Erotic Gherkin”. Quite what was meant to be erotic about it I don’t know.
It is the headquarters of the insurance firm Swiss Re, so however exciting and go-ahead it looks from the outside, inside it is full of deeply dull men in ill-fitting suits.