
Texel Island, just 15 minutes by ferry from Den Helder, is 9km wide by 25km long. Easy breezy if you know it like the back of your hand, which Astrid does, after 29 years. All 8 of its little hamlets can be seen in one day, as well as the lighthouse at the northernmost tip. But to have 3+ full, lazy days to take our time was just what the doctor ordered.
(Click map to enlarge. And yes, they even have an airport.)
Before the lighthouse(s) and windmills and seashells, the bikes, the kite and koffie met appeltaart, we first drove south to nearby Den Hoorn and walked through its sleepy little burgh of approximately 500 residents.

I fell in love with their church and its slanted clock tower.
It was a great start to the long weekend.

While driving from here to there, I started seeing these little barn-like structures out in the middle of the fields.
They supposedly exist only on Texel Island and are called schapenboeten = sheep sheds.
They store hay but the flat side protects sheep from the southwest wind off the North Sea.

Look at what wasn't protected!

But as houses on Texel go, there are some beauties.
Even the one in the bottom right corner is still being lived in...with dilapidated thatch.
Astrid says it's been that way for years!
I knew the Texel lighthouse would be a highlight of the island stay, so we went there twice, to the tippy-top-north of the island:


It was built in 1864 with 8 stories.
We were allowed to climb to the 6th floor observation deck where we saw the bullet holes from WWII.
It's a long story but the Germans occupied the lighthouse when the Georgians from Russia fought to rescue it at the end of the war....

...so, of course, we had to stop by 1 of 2 war memorials in honor of the Russians.
165 Russians were killed trying to protect the Netherlands while on Texel Island.
The Georgian uprising on Texel against the Germans at the end WWII, April-May 1945,
has been described as Europe's last battlefield.
We were allowed to climb to the 6th floor observation deck where we saw the bullet holes from WWII.
It's a long story but the Germans occupied the lighthouse when the Georgians from Russia fought to rescue it at the end of the war....

...so, of course, we had to stop by 1 of 2 war memorials in honor of the Russians.
165 Russians were killed trying to protect the Netherlands while on Texel Island.
The Georgian uprising on Texel against the Germans at the end WWII, April-May 1945,
has been described as Europe's last battlefield.
Our spirits were lifted when we drove south again to the commercial fishing harbor in Oudeschild.


On Saturday and Sunday, the boats are in harbor for repair and rest.
If we had gone on Monday, all of them would have been out to sea.

My guess is there is work for anyone who wants/needs it!
Even fishing boats need to be cleaned, inside and out.
If we had gone on Monday, all of them would have been out to sea.

My guess is there is work for anyone who wants/needs it!
Even fishing boats need to be cleaned, inside and out.
Besides climbing the lighthouse tower, and getting the lay of the land, we had the chance to climb the church tower in Den Burg, Texel's largest town of 6K+ inhabitants...the size of the town where I grew up in Michigan. Almost half of Texel's population lives there.
I love these old Dutch Reformed churches. This one is from 1400....

...but its tower is from 1604!
I love seeing the world from this perspective.
See the church in the middle right image? That's the one from Den Hoorn above.

...but its tower is from 1604!
I love seeing the world from this perspective.
See the church in the middle right image? That's the one from Den Hoorn above.
And see that windmill in the middle left image? That's Het Noorden in Oosterend, north of Den Burg, built in 1878:


This is a polder mill, which means it's used for pumping out water.
That large "drill bit" is a vijzel/waterschroef, which pulls the water up out of the ground.
That large "drill bit" is a vijzel/waterschroef, which pulls the water up out of the ground.
See what Granny Towanda learns by looking and listening!

We got our education, too, when we asked what this gentleman was doing next door to the mill.
He was drying beans for winter storage...which would later be hydrated and cooked.
So THAT'S how we get our dried beans!

We got our education, too, when we asked what this gentleman was doing next door to the mill.
He was drying beans for winter storage...which would later be hydrated and cooked.
So THAT'S how we get our dried beans!
We saw so many things on Texel. As Astrid says, we were short of eyes!
You already know from last post we ate some of these.
Astrid has made jam out of the two middle berries in her past life.

All kinds of fungus among us...except for the red ones with white spots.
Astrid wanted so much for me to see the red ones...but none were to be found this time.

But we did see highland cows and llamas, horses and belted cows,
and enough sheep and rabbits to shake a stick at...

...edible chestnuts (left image), acorns, and honey clover...but NO STORKS.
Just minutes after asking Astrid if the island had storks, we saw the fake ones (above).

I saw 5 churches in all and was mesmerized by the blue clock faces...

...and everything else that is just so Dutch!
Astrid has made jam out of the two middle berries in her past life.

All kinds of fungus among us...except for the red ones with white spots.
Astrid wanted so much for me to see the red ones...but none were to be found this time.

But we did see highland cows and llamas, horses and belted cows,
and enough sheep and rabbits to shake a stick at...

...edible chestnuts (left image), acorns, and honey clover...but NO STORKS.
Just minutes after asking Astrid if the island had storks, we saw the fake ones (above).

I saw 5 churches in all and was mesmerized by the blue clock faces...

...and everything else that is just so Dutch!
When it was time to leave the island and go back home, we took time for one last bit of sightseeing in Den Helder, after getting off the ferry...
...to see the water tower from 1908,
and the Lange Jaap lighthouse from 1878.
and the Lange Jaap lighthouse from 1878.
Now you know why I did this trip in 2 posts...and why I'll now go back to England's trip to finish 2 more posts from there. The thing is, we don't want to forget or have the memories relegated to the archives somewhere.
And all this while preparing for our annual trek to Atlanta to see the kids on Thursday for almost 2 weeks. And I thought retirement was supposed to be...relaxing!
And all this while preparing for our annual trek to Atlanta to see the kids on Thursday for almost 2 weeks. And I thought retirement was supposed to be...relaxing!


