Thursday, April 18, 2024

Daughter Amy in the Netherlands, 2024

 
You may recall that daughter Amy has visited us in the Netherlands twice now (in 2019 and in 2022), both times in conjunction with business trips to the Mercedes-Benz worldwide headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany.  Lucky for her, it was mostly a trip on her company's dime!

THIS time, however, she came totally on her own...and just for her/because of us!  And guess what:  It was a week's visit, from Monday to Monday (March 25-April 1), ending with the Easter weekend.

Tuesday, March 26, her first full day after arrival from Atlanta, was our fullest, longest day out, mainly because it was the only day when rain wasn't predicted.  It was the day we drove to the North Sea, which Amy hadn't yet "experienced."  It's only 81 km from Gorinchem, where we live, to The Hague/Scheveningen, our goal for the day. 

But we decided to stop first in Gouda, halfway, for a koffie break
and a chance to show Amy a famous Dutch city, known for its cheese and city hall.

I was caught off-guard by the memorial to Alexei Navalny in this remote place,
but thankful for such a worldwide event having an impact here, nearby.

It was also a chance for Amy to observe a "more Dutch you cannot get" moment,
when the 2 gentlemen at a nearby table shared bitterballen with their beer.

Amy treated us to a delightful lunch in the world-renown 1818 Kurhaus Hotel on the beach,
over-looking the Scheveningen Pier, near The Hague.  And, yes, the North Sea!

The next day, Wednesday, March 27, was the perfect day for Astrid and me to babysit both Hailey and Sem, who are always out of school Wednesday afternoon.  We spent the time at son Jeroen's house and neighborhood to give the kids plenty of time to be with Amy again, and vice versa....

[collage credit:  Astrid]
first picking Hailey up from school,

[collage credit:  Astrid]
and then watching the kids play at the playground across the street after lunch.

[collage credit:  Astrid]
From there we took a wee walk through the neighborhood, giving us all a nice workout.
As you can see by our coats, it was still quite cold on March 27.

[collage credit:  Astrid]
Once back home, Jeroen joined us to start preparing supper.
(Remember that Jeroen (age 35) and Amy (age 51) are half-siblings!)

[collage credit:  Astrid]
That's when Marissa (Jeroen's wife) and Jaap (Astrid's ex) joined us for Jeroen's poke bowl.

[collage credit:  Astrid]
And guess what pjs the kids wore for bed:  the ones Amy had bought for them at Christmas,
which were colored by the kids and Astrid and me.  They may even fit another year!?!

Thursday, March 28, was lunch on De Stroming barge in Woudrichem, across the Merwede river from us:

Lucky for us, there was a window of about 2 sunny hours afterwards for a nice walk there.

Friday, March 29, was a stay-at-home day for our community's Easter lunch, for which both Astrid and I helped to prepare:

Even Amy helped out with setting the tables, and, once again, like last year,
Astrid prepared the soft-boiled eggs and I knit the mutsjes (little hats) to cover them.
I was so glad Amy could experience a communal event like this with us.

Saturday, March 30, was another stay-at-home day except for a surprise late-afternoon outing we made for Amy at a place we knew she'd love:

La Caponniere is a wee café in a war bunker just a wee walk from our apartment.
We hadn't been there for years, since changing management, but wanted to try it again.
We were not disappointed.  In fact, Amy said it was one of her favorite memories of this trip.

Definitely something to make a tradition out of!

Easter Sunday, March 31, was a true stay-at-home day, when we relaxed and just went with the flow, before Amy's departure home from Amsterdam early the next morning.

Astrid makes this white-asparagus meal for me every Easter,
which I was glad to share with Amy!

Most of the fill-in-the-blanks throughout the week were playing our favorite Five Crowns card game (thanks to Lis from England who got us hooked a few years back).  Lots of talking in between, of course, and just BEING together.

Thank you, Amy, for making it happen.
Let's keep doing it as often as we can!


[Addendum: this was a post meant for a week ago to be more current with the event, but didn't happen because of an unexpected world-wide unavailability to Blogspot for a week.]


Saturday, April 06, 2024

Visiting Philine in Bad Rothenfelde, Germany

 
A day after daughter Amy flew back to Atlanta from visiting us the week before Easter (which I'll get to later), Astrid and I drove to Bad Rothenfelde in Germany to visit dear Philine, from our Shutterchance photoblog, who is in rehab following a right-knee replacement on March 1.

Actually, we made it a 3-day, 2-night trip (Tuesday-Thursday this week), spending 2 nights at a Fletcher Hotel in Denekamp, NL, close to the German border, making our trip to Philine on Wednesday easier--only a one-hour drive each way.  

Bad Rothenfelde is a health resort in Lower Saxony, known for its wellness spas from salty water and air.  Philine's medical clinic is smack-dab in the middle of all that goodness:

It's a huge complex of everything anyone needs for rehab after surgery.

And it's a stone's throw from the gradation towers that remove water
from the saline solution to produce salt for the salt baths:

Because we were a couple hours early for our meet-up time with Philine at 2 p.m.,
we first walked around this largest of 2 towers...in the rain...
and got our education.  This was totally new for me!

And it's all situated in the context of a lovely park
which residents from the clinic can enjoy while in rehab.

We even had time to enjoy some German goulash soup before heading to the clinic.
Exactly what the doctor ordered for a rainy day!

Once with Philine, we spent all of 45 minutes with her!
This is the collage I posted on Shutterchance the next day, for all our friends there
who have been very concerned about how she's doing.

In those 45 minutes, Philine met us at the reception desk, showed us her room,
walked the halls past all the important places (blood labs, exercise equipment, dining room, etc.),
and then back to her room for her to take a nap.  We did her in!

Believe it or not, her knee replacement gives her no pain.  THAT part is a huge success for her.
However, at age 82 (on April 10), the operation did a number on her blood hemoglobin,
making her dangerously anemic--tired, weak and short of breath.
In those 45 minutes, she had to take several sitting breaks.

And by the end, regardless of how tired she was (even though the exercise was important),
she became the Philine we all know at Shutterchance:  our "professor" and mentor.
By the time we left her back in her room, she had her tell-tale smile and twinkle in her eye. 

On the way back to our car, we passed the second, shorter  gradation tower,
sans windmill and rain.

This was a very important trip for Astrid and me, to check up on our dear friend who is very special to our SC community.  Many of us have met her in real life and were concerned about her need for rehab because of her severe anemia.  It so happens that we were her first/only visitors thus far because of sickness among her German friends.  So all the more we are glad we could make this trip.  It was for US as much as it was for her.

Best wishes from all of us, dear Philine, as you continue your recovery....

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