Showing posts with label haystack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haystack. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2020

On the Dutch Backroads


You probably already know this about me but it's still one of my happiest, most favorite things to do:  to drive the backroads of this country I have grown to love.  It never grows old.

Did I mention that last Wednesday, February 5, was our 10th wedding anniversary?  And of all the places to choose from for a wee day's outing, we drove to Gouda, NL, 33+ km from home.

Don't you just love maps!  It always helps me to get the lay of the land.
If you squint, you can see we had a river to ferry across around mid-point (thin blue line).

It's the Lek River and is crossed in Schoonhoven for this trip to Gouda.
I snapped the pics from the car while we waited for the ferry to arrive and unload.

This is again from the car while it's our turn to load and cross over.
I was tickled to see that Garmin captured the speed of the ferry while we were crossing on it.

Now we're on our way again, paying attention to every little thing.
See why we love the backroads so much?!
[Why did the swan cross the road?????]

It so happens that this is the one area of the Netherlands that still has old-timey telephone poles.
Astrid still reminds me that this is very unusual...and yes, I do forget.
Almost everywhere else wires are hidden underground.

Do you like road signs from other countries?
I still sometimes have to ask Astrid what a shape or color means.
Surely you can tell here where the bikes are allowed to travel and where not.
Bike paths are so very important to a country that claims more bikes than people!

Surely you know what this is, right?
In the growing seasons, such a stand will be loaded with produce,
an honesty box/jar nearby for your purchase.  
Sometimes Astrid buys goodies for us at similar stands on her bike rides.

I don't care what season it is, however, when it comes to the passing scenery.
With no leaves on the trees now, you certainly see more.
I especially love the weeping willows and the pollard willows, of which I never tire.

The same for the windmills.  They never grow old for me.

After this photo we arrived in Gouda and started our day there with a latte macchiato, followed by an inside tour of the Sint Janskerk, the longest church in the Netherlands, which was our main goal for this trip.  And THEN a celebratory meal for our anniversary.  But that's all for another post.

So, now we're back in the car on our way home.

Here's a postal worker on her bike, getting ready to cross the white bridge shown earlier.
You never see PostNL post being delivered by car!  Either by bike or by foot with a cart.

Speaking of bikes, the backroads are often where we see the race bikes, like Astrid's.
They slow things down of course, but...isn't that the point?
You get to see the things that make this country "more Dutch you cannot get,"
like the 3-poled silo (top-left) loaded with hay.  The roof slides up or down on the poles,
depending on the amount of hay stored.  Usually we see 4 poles, in the corners...

...like in this image Astrid took that same day (because she likes a "men at work" theme).
You can see the 4 poles with the silo roof lowered down behind the house.

By the time we get to the ferry, the afternoon is waning.
We watch the ferry arrive, unload, and then follow the first car on.
Notice that even heavy trucks (bottom-right) are ferried across!
As an FYI, Schoonhoven means we're leaving the city. Don't you love it!

Passage is cheap each way:  €2.20 for the car and driver (Astrid).  €.70 for the passenger (moi).

What's left to be seen is priceless.
And yes, I still pinch myself, after 10 years here.


Thursday, March 10, 2016

Another Day Out in the Dutch Polder, Near Almkerk


I get antsy for this, you know, needing to see and feel it again.  It's gotten under my skin.  And besides, you never know what you're going to see!

In this case, we specifically went to Almkerk, 7 km south of us across the Merwede river, to find a cat weathervane we knew was there (a long story related to a Facebook friend we know here).  As it turned out, we never found the cat...but will go back with our friend to guide us later.

In the meantime...we were NOT disappointed....

...because we saw our first BUTTERFLY vane!

And, looking at that center image above, do you see a haystack/silo (with a vane on top, yes)?
The roof rises or falls on those corner poles depending on how much hay is stored.
Don't you wonder how the Dutch think these things up?!

It was a good day for vanes, even though we never found the cat!
I included a view of several houses in a row to show how plentiful the vanes sometimes are.

Almkerk also has it's own water tower, restored after the original was destroyed in 1945's WWII.

And two windmills, of which this is one:  the Oude Doornse Molen c. 1700.

And then, of course, you can't have the polder without swans.
Astrid counted 30+ swans in this group, all "children," she says, waiting to find their own field.
Swans pair up for life and live in one spot...one pair per spot/field.
I do hope these kids find their perfect mate.

It was a sunny day, so Mother Nature was out in force, doing her thing.

We were able to tell immediately that the horse rider was handicapped.
How splendid to be taken care of so well...on a beautiful day.

One thing I have learned about the Dutch:  they HAVE to be outdoors.
I don't go outdoors every day but maybe one day I will...and find that I, too, am Dutch?!
I have no excuse.  I just need to do it.


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