So here it is, in a BuzzFeed style celebration, suggestions collected from HOL and Twitter about awesome things to do in Wood Green. If your favourite isn't on the list, ADD IT.
Eat a hearty vegetarian breakfast at The Canteen on Station Road, near Wood Green Station -third shop down (ish).
Read anything by Albert Pinching about Wood Green and its history (order from BGBS here) - while having a veggie breakfast perhaps?
Buy a book, go to an event, join a reading group at The Big Green Bookshop. This amazing indy bookshop provides cultural manna from heaven on a weekly basis and last year brought a literary festival to the Green. It frequently attracts star turns. Did you know Kristin Hersh played a gig there?
Get cheap gardening stuff and plants at Lidl - take a big bag, you’ll be tempted.
Wander around The Marketplace at the back of the Mall, which reminds me of the Asian street markets I once frequented half a lifetime ago. It’s a good place for haberdashery and I’ve had the Greek deli and the Algerian food recommended to me by people who *know* about this stuff.
Pop into Tiger in the Mall to buy little things for those dratted party bags, reading glasses or stick on moustaches.
Shop in Wilkinson’s - the greatest store to ever come south of Watford Gap
Buy All Saints clothes at the TKMaxx in the Mall.
Have lunch at Karamel at the Choc Factory -good lunchtime eatery run by a lovely lady and check out the fab art and history exhibitions on the walls. Go back in the evening for one of the events which include music gigs, film showings and literary nights (usually FREE entry).
Get your eyebrows threaded by Heenah for 4 quid (have to ask Sharon for more details on this).
Buy a box of dates or avocados for a quid on the stalls near the Big Green Bookshop. Also noted that my Portuguese neighbour swears by the fish stall for his fresh sardines.
Check out the homewares sales at BHS. Also home of funky kids T-shirts.
Look at the Montague Burton Building as you leave BHS. See if you can spot the original villas above BHS and Poundland. Try and spot where the Wood Green Empire once hosted famous variety stars and the notorious accident involving a bullet and an American.
Browse the charity shops, including the super re-vamped TRAID shop.
Take a stroll through Noel Park Estate- a beautiful attempt to build decent housing for the artisan classes in a more philanthropic if no less class-ridden age.
Admire the Haringey Civic Centre - an example of Modernism in Metroland
Acquaint yourself with the history of Shopping City and try to learn to love municipal brutalism - remember everything becomes old enough one day to be loved and most people hate new builds for the first 100 years.
Support Parkside Malvern RA and feast your eyes on the Gas Towers that they fought to save. They’ll be gone before you know it.
Go and see some street art without traipsing to Shoreditch - there’s the Shepard Fairey and the work of the Turnpike Lane Art Group
Dress up to the nines and eat at Mosaica at the Chocolate Factory - to be honest, as good as Jamie Oliver's Fifteen (and I've eaten at both).
Have a curry at The Paramount up past Wood Green Station - a family run business popular with patrons from 9 months to 90 yrs.
Watch the basketball or have a go at the outdoor gym at Ducketts Common -this outdoor space gets more lovely as the years pass and there’s something really special about seeing it so alive with young people playing games and having fun in the sun. Join the Friends to help make it happen.
Take the kids to play at Wood Green Common, Russell Park & Belmont Rec.
Join the cafe society at Coffee Republic at Spouter's Corner. A good place to read your Pinching history books.
Visit the artists and view their work at The Chocolate Factory Open Studios in November.
Eat Turkish food - Kervan Gokyuzu on the High Road won best newcomer at the British Kebab awards, although my sources tell me you’ll also do well at Kebab Delight better than “Kaslik in Soho”.
Watch live music at The Duke of Edinburgh pub, Mayes Road.
Tell your teenager (or the nearest one) about the award winning Teen Library in Wood Green Library
See more free art at Wood Green Library: Genesis by artist Gitl Braun. This thousand fold magnification of an art restorer’s palette is permanently on display, seen from the Ground Floor.
Buy a pair of leopard skin leggings to wear at your yoga or pilates class :)
With thanks to @gillpea, Chris Brosnahan, doug, Sharon, Tunbridge Wells, Laura Mole, Finsbury Park Ranger, Laura, Racheal Leigh, Alan Stanton and Melvyn from whom these ideas came with a few of my own thrown in for good measure.
And here's 30 more as suggested by folks in the comments or via Twitter
Feel free to add more suggestions of awesomeness but if you want to moan or even make constructive suggestions on how to improve the Wood Green experience, you need to be over here.
Tags for Forum Posts: Wood Green
Probably more at the bottom of my road than on WG High Road to be frank but *slaps own wrist* NO DOG POO talk allowed
They were talking about pedestrianising it a few years ago and a book on Google says it was originally designed to be pedestrianised. Perhaps this is the design flaw...
A bridge/flyover may be easier, fewer cables and tube tunnels to detour round. Let's go for the full Chicago. An extra advantage is that we could chuck our gum down on the celebrants below.
Here's another three:
The Asian Centre in Caxton Road,
The West Indian Cultural Centre in Clarendon Road
The Cypriot Centre in Earlham Grove.
How about joining 'Tottenham and Wood Green Friends of the Earth' and make a difference locally? http://www.foe.co.uk/groups/tottenhamwoodgreen/
A few local successes...
We persuaded Haringey Council to set a target to reduce CO2 emissions from the borough by 40% by 2020, and they adopted an action plan to do this.
We have consistently lobbied our two MPs about climate change and got them to lobby their party leaders.
We have influenced some of the big developments in the borough, like Spurs and the Hale Village site at Tottenham Hale.
We have gathered thousands of signatures on petitions to government on key issues, most recently, to save bees.
We are also working to create new wildflower meadows for bees in local parks.
We have distributed 10,000 leaflets about climate change to homes across the area.
We are part of the Sustainable Haringey network. www.sustainableharingey.org.uk
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