Sunday 29 May 2011

Mummies, Musicians, and the amazing Miniatur Wunderland!

Heading for Denmark, our journey through northern Germany took us to three places which really stood out; Bremen, Hamburg, and Lübeck.

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Bremen has some beautiful buildings around its central square and we spent a few hours seeing the sights. Charlie is now so used to being tied up outside buildings while we pop our heads in, and nine times out of ten there’ll be someone cooing over her when we get back!


The city is famous for its beer (Mmm, Becks!) and the musicians from the Brothers Grimm fairy tale – the donkey, the dog, the cat and the cock. There’s a statue of them in the city’s square, stood one on top of the other, and it’s traditional to hold the donkey’s legs and make a wish. David tried this but he’s still not the 6th member of Take That!


One of the city’s more curious attractions, if it can be described as such, is in the Bleikeller (lead cellar). Eight mummies including a Swedish general, a careless roofer, and a student killed in a duel have been gawping up at visitors from their glass topped coffins for over 300 years. Creepy!

We then had three fantastic days taking in Germany’s second city, Hamburg. The city has a great feel and there’s plenty to occupy tourists for a few days while remaining a big working city and one of Europe’s largest ports.


Many of the historic buildings in Germany’s towns and cities were destroyed during the Second World War but most have since been rebuilt. The St. Nikolai Church in Hamburg however has been left a ruin as a memorial to all who’ve died as a result of oppression and war.

The small museum in the old crypt features some pretty startling pictures and facts about the destruction, not just in Hamburg, but Warsaw in Poland and Coventry in the UK.

All that remains of the church is the blackened spire and a glass lift now takes you up the centre of it for some great views out over the city, the lakes, the river Elbe and the docks.


During our time in Hamburg we managed a boat tour of the waterways, a trip up another church tower for the views, the Elbe tunnel, and a couple of nights out. We also took a stroll down the famous red-light district, the Reeperbahn, but the prostitutes seemed more interested in the dog than us!


It’s hard to describe the gob-smacking excitement on entering Miniature Wonderland. So hard, that it’s perhaps best just to take a look at a few photos and the promotional video - none of which really do it justice.






It’s named quite appropriately, and having calmed down a little after being there for a couple of hours it was amusing to notice that every visitor was wearing a grin from ear to ear!

It’s billed as the world’s biggest model railway but it’s so much more than that, with lorries that speed along the roads and an airport complete with planes which take off and land.


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We loved our time in Munich and Cologne last year but we’d have to say that Hamburg beats them both. We’re now very much looking forward to tackling Berlin in the autumn.



From Hamburg we moved onto Lübeck, one of the few German towns not to be completely destroyed during the war. It has a beautiful Alstadt (old town), with towering green spires on its churches and a particularly impressive town hall.




Marzipan is big business here; in fact they claim to have invented it. One slightly bizarre attraction is the Marzipan Salon above the Niederegger Cafe. The life-sized marzipan statues are particularly (and unintentionally) funny!


We’ve heard that Scandinavia can be eye-wateringly expensive, so we took the opportunity to stock up while in Germany. It was quite a job to fit it all in and we’ll probably be fishing cans of kidney beans out from behind the water tank for months to come!

Friday 27 May 2011

Windmills, Big Wheels, and Big Red Rubbery Balls!

To say the Netherlands is flat is a bit of an understatement. The landscape is so pancake flat it’s almost unnerving, especially to two people from Yorkshire!

And wherever you go you’re surrounded by water as the whole country is latticed with canals and drainage ditches. It’s hard to see how the place isn’t constantly flooding but that’s why there are a lot of windmills here, which pump the water away from where it’s not wanted.

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From Amsterdam we headed into north into Noord-Holland. Now, here’s a little-known fact for you; Holland and the Netherlands are not the same. Holland is made up of just two of the 12 provinces which form the Netherlands – an area roughly between Rotterdam, Amsterdam and Den Helder.

After a quick stop at the very small and very quiet town of Edam, where we managed to resist the big red rubbery balls (quite an achievement for cheese lovers), we headed on to the coast at Hoorn.

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The huge stretch of water which separates Noord-Holland from the province of Friesland was once the Zuider Zee, or ‘Southern Sea’. But in 1932 a 30km long dyke called the Afsluitdijk was constructed at its mouth. The Zuider Zee became the Ijsselmeer, a huge fresh water lake; parts of it were drained and turned into farm land and the whole area was thus protected from flooding.

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Many of the country’s famous explorers once set sail from Hoorn to discover new lands such as New Zealand and Tasmania. In 1616 William Schouten set off to discover a route around South America and named its tip ‘Cape Hoorn’ in the process, after his home town.

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We spent a couple of days wandering around Hoorn and nearby Enkhuizen, where we camped at the harbour facing hundreds of Dutch barges. Both towns are very picturesque with attractive harbour areas and lots of very grand merchant’s houses.

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Having crossed the Afsluitdijk, we visited the world’s oldest working Planetarium at Franeker. It was built by Eise Eisinga, a local wool comber, on the ceiling of his living room in 1774. It took 7 years to complete but still accurately shows the movement of the planets, tide times, phases of the moon, sunrise and sunset times, position of the sun in the sky and much more.

The whole thing is run by the mechanism of one small clock and you can see all the connecting wheels, cogs and weights on the upper floor. It’s quite an incredible machine and well worth a visit.

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Our last stop before moving on to Germany was Groningen where we viewed the town from a big wheel, Alex having momentarily forgotten his fear of heights until it reached the top!

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The town’s most interesting sites were the Groningen museum buildings, and the huge number of bicycles which had recently been fished out of the town’s canals!

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In the next episode we have a whale of a time in Hamburg, and David rubs a donkey’s legs and makes a wish!

Tot straks!

Wednesday 18 May 2011

Bicycles, Joints and Jedward!

On arriving in Amsterdam we headed straight to Camping Zeeburg, which is well connected to the centre of the city; just 20 minutes by tram or bike.


The bicycle reigns supreme in the Netherlands. There are cycle tracks everywhere you look and they’re quite often a good distance away from the main roads. It’s amazing to see so many people, especially children, tearing along on them.

Everybody seems to ride an upright town bicycle that would look quite old fashioned in the UK. Our mountain bikes look quite out of place, but there’s not a lot of call for mountain bikes in a country where the highest point is just 322 metres! 27% of the Netherlands is actually below sea level!


Cycling into the centre of Amsterdam was a little hairy. Bikes were coming at us from all angles at some busy junctions, and we weren’t too sure of the rules.

The hardest part was actually finding a parking space i.e. a railing to chain the bikes to. We were very excited a little later on when we saw the ultimate solution; a multi-storey bike park!!


Seeing the city by boat was great, and the tour we went on was full of interesting facts. There are over 100 kilometres of canal in Amsterdam, far more than we had first thought.

On average one car per week ends up in one of the canals, but three had apparently been fished out the week we visited. Perhaps the drivers had spent a little too long in one of the city’s many ‘coffee shops’, which sell rather more cannabis than they do coffee!


We spent Saturday night watching the Eurovision Song Contest in one of the many bars in the city, where Jedward were surprisingly popular. Let's not talk about Blue shall we!!

The following day the streets were full of people watching Amsterdam’s main football team, Ajax, win the Dutch league – queue lots of beeping car horns, fireworks and singing!

We spent a lot of time simply wandering around Amsterdam, but we did the usual tourist things too; admiring the architecture and giggling at the prostitutes in their shop windows!


We also visited Anne Frank’s house, where the Frank family hid from the Nazis for 2 years from 1942. The story of the family is now so well known, but to see the actual building really brings the story to life.

All in all, we really enjoyed Amsterdam. It may not be to everyone’s taste, but it’s very picturesque and has a lively centre.

From here we’re hitting Noord-Holland and then Friesland (home of the cows!) before moving on to Bremen and Hamburg for the weekend.

TTFN!

Friday 13 May 2011

Belgian Beaches and Dutch Dykes!

So we’re on the move again!


We had three weeks in Blighty catching up with friends and family, and an excellent weekend in London on the way out which included a fascinating tour of the Palace of Westminster (seriously - everyone should go on this tour!!)


We’ve been slowly making our way north for a couple of days, through Belgium and the Netherlands, and are now approaching Amsterdam.


Highlights so far have been cycling around Zeeland, the Thursday market at the lovely town of Middelburg where David tried a pickled fish and raw onion sandwich - nice!...




...and the Delta Project - a series of impressive sea defences on the Dutch coast.



This map shows our intended route for this trip, which will hopefully be around 5 months long.


We’ll be going at quite a pace over the next 6 weeks as we want to reach the Arctic Circle by the summer solstice on 21st June. On this date we’ll not only experience the midnight sun, but the sun won’t actually dip below the horizon. Should be fun and just a bit confusing!

First things first - we’ve a long weekend in Amsterdam and a lot of washing to do!




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