Morgan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 12:40 am
On another more personal note, Maikel, in May we will spend a few days in Amsterdam and then cruise up the Rhine including Kinderdijk. (Yes, we will be a couple of those pesky American tourists.) Anything we should be sure to see (or eat) beside the usual tourist places?
Thanks.
I'm probably not the right person to ask.
For me Amsterdam is where I studied and went out, not to be a tourist.
I would suggest avoiding the tourist traps of Amsterdam.
The red light district really isn't all that interesting, and
stroopwafels are much cheaper if you buy them anywhere but the Kalverstraat and surrounding streets.
Of course you have the Museumplein with the arts museums, for example the Rijksmuseum and the van Gogh museum, but that's probably already on your list.
If you're into science, the
Nemo Science Museum is always very interesting.
Learn about science hands-on.
And maybe the
Scheepvaartmuseum (Maritime Museum), almost next door to Nemo?
Confession, my school was opposite the museum, yet I never visited it.
Nor have I ever visited Kinderdijk, for that matter.
If you have the time and can travel a little, and like going off the beaten track, and want to know more about the old ways in the area where I grew up, visit the
Broeker Veiling museum, the oldest sail-through vegetable auction in the world.
Then there are the marvels of our fight against the sea, but again, you'd have to travel to see them.
The Delta Works, with its visitors centre at
Neeltje Jans.
Or the 32 km long Afsluitdijk, with its new
Afsluitdijk Wadden Center.
Learn about the dike and the
Waddenzee (Wadden Sea), the largest intertidal zone in the world, stretching all the way to Denmark, and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Before starting your cruise on the Rhine, perhaps work on your sea legs by taking a ferry to one of the beautiful islands?
Closer to Amsterdam you have the
Hollandse Waterlinie (Dutch Water Defence Lines), a 200 km long defence line of fortifications and waterworks to defend the heart of the country against invaders by flooding large areas.
Also a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Unfortunately the English part of the site isn't very informative, you'd have to look at the
Dutch version to see what's to do where.
Spoiler: the Hollands Waterlinie was never used in earnest.
During WW1 The Netherlands were neutral and by the time of WW2 warfare had changed so much they had become obsolete, water no longer stopped armies.
I hadn't planned it, but I can detect a nautical theme here.