Because we almost never drive from Point A to Point B in a straight line, here's a bit of a prelude before I take you to the next museum on our Museum Card.
In all fairness to our first museum, which was the open-air museum in Arnhem,
here's the windmill in Geldermalsen we stopped at first for our cornmeal, ground there by the mill.
It's the De Bouwing grain mill from 1848.
And it was a gorgeous spring day, April 11.
And it was a gorgeous spring day, April 11.
Two weeks later we drove to our second museum, just 6 miles from from us, in Werkendam.
And as you know, we stop whenever something interests us along the way!
That huge house next to the church had whirligigs in their yard and cows in their window. HA!
Whenever I got out of the car, I HAD to capture the flowers...even the weeds.
The right-middle image is rapeseed. They grow a lot of it in England but just a little here.
A handful of weathervanes.
A few sheep and cows.
We even had to stop for a saiboat at the Biesbosch lock drawbridge.
Astrid has lived with drawbridges and locks her entire life and still gets excited about them with me.
I loved watching the tip of the sailboat mast pass by!
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By the time we arrived in the vicinity of the Biesbosch Museum, it was time for koffie.
It was a good place to start feeling the energy of this water basin,
formed after the St. Elizabeth flood of 1421.
Today it is a nature preserve with reminders of a day gone by when inhabitants earned their living here,
fishing, hunting, weaving baskets, farming....
As museums go, at €3.75 normal rate, it sure packed a wallop.
For some reason, I've always been a glutton for life-sized model re-enactments of past eras.
Someone put a lot of time and energy into all the details.
I liked the boats, of course....
...but my favorite was this mama doing the laundry with her sweet little girl (and cat!) nearby.
Did we really use to do things that way??? Oh, yes. I remember. HA!
All the taxidermy was done to perfection. The birds....
...critters...
...and even the water creatures, all in their natural habitat.
The walls were covered with photography and paintings.
Lots of history to see and read about or watch on flatscreens throughout.
We actually were thrilled by this little museum.
It took us only 2 hours to see it all...perfect for an afternoon's inspiration.
Another time we may decide to go back and pay the extra price of the electrically-powered "cruise"
around the creeks and waterways, to see the otters, birds, foxes and who-knows-what.
Don't you just love what you can find in your backyard...once you buy your annual museum card!
As an FYI, we fly to England tomorrow for our Shutterchance photoblog meet-up on Sunday,
and will return on the 18th with lots to show and tell!
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
As an FYI, we fly to England tomorrow for our Shutterchance photoblog meet-up on Sunday,
and will return on the 18th with lots to show and tell!









































