Okay, now it's time to tell you about a new favorite city of mine, Amsterdam! Me, Julia and Becca left on Easter very early in the morning. Me and Becca had to leave the dorms at like 3 in the morning to get our flight at 6:05AM. We got into Amsterdam at around 8:00AM, because of the time change, the flight was only an hour and 25 min. We took a train to Centraal Station and then rode their tram system to our hostel, since we had our bags with us. It was strange to be in a country where I didn't even vaguely know the language. I had never experienced that before, having only been to the UK and Spain. Most people spoke English in Amsterdam, luckily. And Julia speaks German, so that's at least a little close to Dutch. We got to our hostel (which turned out to be quite nice, it was called The Flying Pig, haha) and checked in, and then went exploring! We just wanted to see what the city had to offer. It was an absolutely beautiful day, about 75 degrees. Amsterdam has so many canals, and everyone was out on their boats, enjoying the holiday. I have so many pictures of the canals. And the bikes! I've never seen so many bikes in my life. They were everywhere. And they have their own lane, between the walking sidewalk and the street. If you're not used to it, you often end up accidentally walking in the bike lane. And then you'll hear a ding ding! trying to get you out of the way before they run you over. It's sort of scary.
The first day we got some food immediately, since we were starving. And we learned that the Dutch love to put mayonnaise on their fries (or "frites", at the Dutch call them) and that mayo is just called "frite sauce". Frite is fuh-reet. After food, we explored the flower market in the middle of the city, which sold literally every possible type of tulip you could imagine, because Holland is the tulip capital of the world. Quick geography lesson: The Netherlands is the country, Holland is the county, and Amsterdam is the city. We did some souvenir shopping, got some postcards and such. Then we saw a carnival going on, we think for Easter weekend. It was right in front of the Royal Palace, which no monarch has ever really lived in. The Netherlands is weird like that, haha. They had a ferris wheel, and we thought about riding that, but it was 6 euro (like $12) which is way too much. Then we decided to go ahead and get in the very long line for the Anne Frank House. I really wanted to go, having read the book as a kid, like most of the world. You can't take pictures inside and all of the furniture has been removed, as per Otto Frank's (her father, and the only one who survived the Holocaust) request. It was an eerie experience, you saw Anne's room, with her pictures from magazines still hanging on the wall, of movie stars, of Queen Elizabeth II, not yet Queen. Also they had her original diaries. I'm very glad we went, but it was very sobering as well. Another thing the museum had was the Oscar that Shelley Winters won for portraying Petronella van Daan in the movie of the diary released in 1959. It was cool to see an actual Oscar, even thought you couldn't touch it.
Our second day began with a free tour of Amsterdam, meeting in Dam Square, right next to the palace, and then going from there to the Red Light District. This was about 11:00AM, but there was still, shall we say, ladies of the night, in their windows. Our tour guide told us, before going through the District, that we should not take pictures of them. Apparently a man on his tour had tried to before, and the women ran out of the building, chased him down and to quote our tour guide (censoring just a bit) "beat the living crap out of him". So taking pictures of them is a big no-no. We stopped at a church right in the middle of the Red Light District. Yes, a church. There is also a kindergarten near there. The church was massive. Our tour guide told us why: long ago, sailors used to come to shore here in Amsterdam, after quite some time at sea, and they would of course, go straight to those ladies in their windows. Waking up the next morning, remembering they had wives and children, and feeling very bad about themselves, they went to the church to confess. So in the church, they paid for these indulgences, and so many soldiers went and paid money for indulgences so many times that the church grew and grew, because of the money it was making off the sailors. I thought this was pretty funny, ha. Another story that our tour guide told us that pretty much summed up the Dutch way of thinking was about their buildings. On the very top of all of the buildings in Amsterdam, there are hooks coming out of the roof (pictures will be below). These hooks were to pull up goods to the top floors for storage. Stairs in Amsterdam buildings are very, very steep, it's almost like going up a ladder. They were like this in our hostel and the Anne Frank House. Very steep and very narrow, so really hard to carry goods up. So they would use a sort of pulley system to haul goods up to the top, slinging the rope over the hooks. But then they found that goods kept hitting the building on the way up, bouncing off the wall and sometimes hurting the goods. So, they decided in order to solve this, they would lean the buildings towards the street. So many buildings in Amsterdam lean. Our tour guide pointed out the ridiculousness of this, because they could have just made the arms holding the hooks longer, solving the problem. He called this way of thinking the Dutch way, ha.
Later in the tour, our guide pointed out the old Jewish part of the city, which was destroyed during WWII, not because of hate, but because it was emptied of people by the Nazis who had taken over the city, and because it was emptied, starving people left in the city raided it for firewood and food. Then, in the 60s, they decided to rebuild and gave the job to some architecture students, and they did a terrible job according to our tour guide. I thought some of the buildings were kind of cool, actually. Another thing pointed out later was some metal pieces put in some corners of buildings on the streets. These were to stop men from "relieving themselves" in the corners. See if you can guess why when you see the picture below, haha. After the tour, we decided it was a beautiful day to rent a paddle boat and go out on the canal. It was really fun, very relaxing, if it was a little hard to figure out where we were going because it was hard to read the street signs from the canal and we had to get the boat back to another rental place before our hour rental was up. Then we headed to the House of Bols, a cocktail museum, all about taste and smell and the history of bar tending. It was cool, and you got a cocktail with purchase of your ticket into the museum! ha. Then we got some famous Dutch pancakes, which were amazingly delicious, I got banana ones. After the pancakes, we had some wine in the park next to our hostel and explored the park, it was huge and lots of people were cooking out, and it didn't get dark until about 9:00PM, so that was really nice.
On our third day, we decided to go to the beach because our hostel owned another hostel down further south in Holland, on the beach. It was beautiful. The water was freezing, since the beach was on the North Sea, but it was very pretty. We had a nice relaxing time just sitting on the sand. We had some food there too, in the little beach town, but since it was out of the city people did not speak as much English as in Amsterdam. So that was interesting. I just sort of nodded, and he spoke the few words of English he knew. Oh! I forgot to mention that our driver down to the beach hostel, who worked for the hostel and drives the shuttle down to the beach, he offered to stop by a tulip field so we could take some pictures of them. So many tulips! It was great, he took a great shot of us in the flowers.
We left early the next morning, took a bus back to the airport. The airport experience was sort of strange, because you didn't go through security until right before you got on the plane. I didn't like that, I like to get security over with right away. And then after security, we took a bus to our plane. So that's weird. Also, we got to try out the body scanner machines. We were not very good at them. I think they were trying to phase out the metal detectors and go exclusively with the body scan machines in the Amsterdam airport. But apparently I don't raise my arms above my head the correct way, so she had to pat down my pockets anyway. Also, at least in the Amsterdam airport, the picture screen was right there, you could see it, as could the security people. Male and female. Honestly, I have no problem with this, I could care less. But I know some Americans would be losing their minds over that. It could possibly be different in the States, I don't know. So we arrived in Edinburgh, only to walk back to the dorms and repack for London! More about that in the next post...
 |
| Tulips at the Flower Market |
 |
| Carnival, behind the Ferris wheel is the Royal Palace |
 |
| Canal...and bikes! |
 |
| The hooks on the tops of buildings |
 |
| "Ugly" architecture in the old Jewish district |
 |
| More canals! =] |
 |
| To keep men from "relieving" themselves in the corners, haha! |
 |
| Paddle boating =] |
 |
| My strawberry vanilla cocktail at the museum |
 |
| Pancake! Yum. |
 |
| Tulip field |
 |
| Beach on the North Sea |