Delft is attractive and, naturally, full of Delftware shops. We wondered at the similarity to Chinese Willow pattern china, but this was explained when we leant that Delft was another of the cities where the Dutch East India Company was based.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Delft - 8 April 2007
Delft is attractive and, naturally, full of Delftware shops. We wondered at the similarity to Chinese Willow pattern china, but this was explained when we leant that Delft was another of the cities where the Dutch East India Company was based.
Keukenhof Gardens - 8 April 2007
The main reason we choose Amsterdam in April was to visit the Keukenhof Gardens: the best spring bulb garden in the world. However, after paying €13 each to get in, the miserable toads charge €0.30 to use the toilets. How mean can you possibly get?


Nevertheless, the day was brilliant,


and we spent several very enjoyable hours


wandering around the gardens.


It was a wonderful way


to spend Easter Sunday,


enjoying the symbolism of the 'dead' bulbs


becoming new life


with their beautiful blooms.

Nevertheless, the day was brilliant,
and we spent several very enjoyable hours
wandering around the gardens.
It was a wonderful way
to spend Easter Sunday,
enjoying the symbolism of the 'dead' bulbs
becoming new life
with their beautiful blooms.
Hoorn - 7 April 2007
As our fourth fabulous town for the day we were now drowning in a surfeit of cute and quaint views.
We resisted the touristy looking cafés in the square, and had a
A quirk of old Dutch architecture is that buildings lean in towards the street,
Edam - 7 April 2007
But we couldn’t; so instead, after buying the obligatory Edam in Edam, we were back on the bus heading for Hoorn.
Waterland wanderings - 7 April 2007
Leaving the ‘island’ in the traditional manner, we took the ferry across the bay to Volendam. Here they have given up on traditional fishing and abandoned themselves to the tourist coaches; so it is very touristy and not as enjoyable.
Freedoms and rights - 7 April 2007
At the end of the tour, there is a very thought provoking
Amsterdam - 6 April 2007
Sitting at a street café looking across to the Waag we enjoyed a delicious salad lunch, and then wandered off to visit the museum in the house Rembrandt owned and worked in for 20 years. Sadly, he went bankrupt, but from the detailed inventories made at the time of the forced sale the museum has been able to restore and furnish the house as it was when Rembrandt lived and worked there.
Since it was now well after 7 p.m. we thought that the Anne Frank queue might have shortened so detoured in that direction. The queue was at least twice as long as in the morning: looks like an early morning start is the answer.
The guide books warn of the consequences of taking photos, so you just have to imagine a beauty pageant with all the contestants in their bikinis, but instead of standing in a row on a stage, they are all behind glass doors in every house along particular streets, often looking totally bored. Perhaps one needed to show a bit of interest in what they were offering to solicit some sort reciprocal response.
The footpaths were crowed with groups of curious tourists. (Clearly this did not include us – we were simply returning to our hotel!)
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