A stroll in Abney Park’s Victorian cemetery followed by lunch at Homa cafe in Stoke Newington

We’re lucky to have one of London’s most beautiful Victorian cemeteries in Stoke Newington. Abney Park also doubles up as a nature reserve, after about twenty paces through the wrought iron gates the hubbub of urban living is left behind and all you can hear is birdsong. Last time I was there, a woodpecker was yammering amongst the mature trees that used to form part of an arboretum that, in its time, eclipsed Kew Gardens.

Abney Park plays host to a wonderful selection of ornate statuary, including angels, urns and elaborate Celtic crosses. My favourite is a sleeping, white marble lion that sits on the tomb of Frank C Bostock – a remarkable man who was known as the early 20th century ‘Animal King’. He paraded a huge pride of lions and tigers around the world, introduced the boxing kangaroo to the public and hosted ‘a party of Abyssinians and a group of trained hyenas’ at the Paris Hippodrome. He came to Stoke Newington and died of the flu, and his tomb, guarded by a peaceful sleeping lion, has been here ever since.

After a stroll around the cemetery I always love to stop in at Homa – a wonderful café and restaurant just across from the cemetery gates. They serve delicious Mediterranean food, pastries and excellent coffee, with silver milk jugs and complementary bottled water. It’s a great place to people-watch, read the selection of daily newspapers, and the pizzas are truly some of the best I’ve tasted.

Photo courtesy of El Freddy on Flickr and HOMA

About the Author

This lovely thing to do in London was kindly shared by Liz Vater, who runs the Stoke Newington Literary Festival, set up to celebrate the area’s ties with authors like Edgar Allen Poe, Daniel Defoe and the mother of feminism Mary Wollstonecraft.