We are really hitting the highlights of continental Europe!
Today we found ourselves in Amsterdam, the capital city of the Netherlands. Unusually,
the city is not the seat of government for the country; this is The Hague. In
the early morning with started sailing up the North Sea Canal. On each side we past fields, highways, houses and then more built-up and industrial areas of the city.
Amsterdam is a joy. The city really shows off the golden age
of the Netherlands, when the city was the richest in the world. It got that way
over a few hundred years first as an exploring and whaling nation and then as a
trader in spices and other valuable commodities in the east and west
indies. Over this time the country
acquired many colonies overseas. Many of the buildings in the central part of
the city reflect this richness.
Many of us took part is a very interesting tour of the city
by coach and canal boat. This is a great way to get a sense of the real
character of this place. With over 100km of canals Amsterdam is rightly
referred to as the “Venice of the North”. Public transport by bus, street car
and rail seems to be very popular as is travel on bicycles, of which there are
800,000 in the city, or about one for every person in Amsterdam proper (“metro”
Amsterdam boasts a population of about
1.5 million inhabitants).
|
Anne Frank was a native of Amsterdam |
Of course, the Netherlands is noted as the world capital of bulbs. Here is a tiny selection for sale in the floating flower market.
One noticeable feature of almost all the buildings in the
inner city was the hoisting beam sticking out of the top floor of each. Old
warehouses on the shore line of course would need these beams to hoist goods
from a ship or the dock, up into the building. The existence of hoisting beams
on residences is a little puzzling however. It turns out that the stairways on
these old residences are often so narrow that furniture and other large items
need to be hoisted up to the upper floors, as if they were barrels of fish,
salt or whale oil!