On Sunday, April 28, 2013, I took a train from Cologne, Germany to Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
We didn't have quite enough frequent flier miles to get Linette to Germany, but we did have enough to get her to Amsterdam, so we decided to meet there.
I arrived by train on Sunday afternoon, and the first thing that struck me about the city was its amazing system of canals that ring the city.
Below is a satellite picture of the concentric canals of Amsterdam, which were planned and constructed in the 1600s.
The other most notable thing about Amsterdam is the bicycles. They're everywhere! It is said that there are more bicycles than people in The Netherlands.
Near the train station is a parking garage for bicycles.
I enjoyed walking the streets and watching the little boats travel down the canal. This is one of my favorite pictures, where a dad and three daughters are riding on a boat, and one of the daughters is lying right on the bow, reading a book as they glide down the canal. So fun!
The hotel I was staying at offered a "free drink" at their restaurant/bar, so I went in and got a bottle of 7-Up. It was so tiny! (8 ounces, perhaps?) While there, I saw a family having a little dinner, and I had a wonderful conversation with them. The guy was from New Jersey in the United States, and had a great "Joisey" accent. The gal was from northern England and had a "lovely" accent. They were there on "holiday" with their two kids, and it was so nice to visit with them.
I was so glad to hear a knock at the door Monday morning and find that Linette had made it!
At one stop, there were some very dramatic-looking Rembrandt scenes on a wall, so I joined in for a moment.
We saw some of the "Delftware" (blue and white porcelain) that the Dutch are famous for.
This is a real guy, painted silver like the surrounding statues.
One other thing we did that day was to walk through the Anne Frank House. I fortunately got tickets in advance, which avoided a 2-hour line there. Anne Frank's family went into hiding in this house during World War II. They had a whole upstairs area that wasn't obvious from the outside. Anne kept a diary during their seclusion from 1942 to 1944. Eventually, a neighbor reported them, and their whole family was sent to a concentration camp. Anne died a few months later, just a couple months before the camp she was in was liberated. Her father Otto was the only survivor.
That visit was a poignant reminder of how important it is to maintain love and respect for all people--especially those who seem different from yourself in some way. When we think of people as "them" instead of "us"; or assign a label to someone (<race>, <color>, <religion>, "jerk", "loser", "idiot"); then it is human nature to justify all manner of ill treatment. The Holocaust is an example of how there is no end to how horrible people can treat each other when they don't think of them as human, and when they don't take personal responsibility for their own actions ("I was just following orders.") History is full of similar atrocities, and everyone has to do their part to improve the amount of love and respect we all have for each other, and to maintain freedoms that can help to avoid letting things like this happen. I'm sure there are no easy answers, but if we ever feel ourselves feeling hate or contempt for a group of people, that's a red flag that we should probably examine ourselves and see if we can drum up some compassion.
Queen's Day
When we were booking a hotel in Amsterdam, it was strange how few rooms there were available. We finally booked one, and our hotel e-mailed me to tell me that April 30 (the second day we were there) was "Queen's Day" (Koninginnedag), which is the queen's birthday. For that day, they shut down the bus system, and 800,000 people typically come to town for a huge party. This year, though, it was even bigger, because the queen was abdicating the throne and turning it over to her son Willem-Alexander on that day, so the crowd was expected to be more like one million people.
We're always up for a party, so we were looking forward to it.
We hadn't gone 20 feet from our hotel before someone handed me and Linette each an orange hat (which symbolizes the royal "House of Orange").
Everyone was wearing them.
"Do you like my party hat?"
I liked some of the intricate wood carvings.
Here's a 40-second video clip showing the party atmosphere as they sang "Somebody to Love".
Later we went to Vondelpark, which is like their "Central Park" (I jokingly called it "Centraal Park"). It was pretty, and a bit removed from the throng of partiers.
Then I went to buy some mini-pancakes (poffertjes), and when I came back, the guy was there again, so I shooed him away again.
"Wow, Linette," I commented. "In your forties, and you've still got it!"
Then, because I can't leave well enough alone, I added, "...'course, he was drunk..." (Oh, dear.)
(This was a lot like the time that our family was eating dinner at home, and Linette complained about getting wrinkles or something. I looked at her and said, "Linette, you look as young as the day we met."
The kids said, "Awwwww!"
Then I added, "...'course, it was dark." And the kids slapped their foreheads. I'm the worst.)
The next day, we boarded a train to visit Keukenhoff Gardens.
I thought it was great that the ice cream stand there was called the "Happiness Station." I couldn't agree more.
Keukenhoff Gardens is world-famous for its display of tulips and other flowers in the spring. They plant 7 million flower bulbs there every year. It is only open to the general public for 8 weeks a year, from mid-March to mid-May, so we were lucky to be there at the right time.
Choo! Choo! |
I thought it was great that the ice cream stand there was called the "Happiness Station." I couldn't agree more.
These flowers look like a purple path through the woods.
Some of the grounds were just trees and grass, of course, but since all the pictures focus on the flowers, you may get the sense that it's solid flowers throughout the garden.
It was cool to see all the different ways they decorated.
One dog going in...
Speaking of which, when we were done at the garden, we picked up our luggage from the front booth, and caught a bus for the coast to catch our ferry to England. I wasn't sure where to wait at first, so I asked a lady, and she said, "You go down de hall, true dose doors...and der's de bus." I thought that was so adorable.
In the next episode, we spend 3 days in London, which isn't nearly enough, and visit my friend Dan.
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