Category Archives: Summer 2019 – Central Europe

Day 2 – Franeker

Today, we left the big city to visit Suzanne and Harold’s home in the small town of Franeker, in the region of Friesland.

It was a day of quiet discovery, as they took me to several places in this old town that date back to the mid-1600s. What a delight!

First up was a tour of Franker’s pride: the oldest planetarium in the world.

In 1774, amateur astronomer Eisa Eisinga told his wife that he wanted to build a place where he could study the planets — and he wanted to build it in their living room. Mrs. Eisinga must have been a saint, because she agreed, and the rest is history.

What resulted was a mechanical marvel that has been keeping an accurate record of the movement of the planets and the precise clock time for 245 years, without stopping. It was a wonder to see.

The guts of the machine was housed above the ceiling, using all moving parts, timed to perfection. I am amazed at the mechanical and mathematical prowess it took to manufacture a scientific feat of this magnitude in the 1700s. And all the planets (Uranus and Pluto had not yet been discovered, so the model stops with Neptune) revolve according to their timed movement in the heavens, so their actual motion is undetectable by looking at them for five minutes. But a revisit in six months would reveal all the planets in different places, making their way around the sun. Incredible.

We had lunch at a beautiful cafe in the town square, across the street from an orphanage built for lost children in 1668. As with many other Netherlands cities, the town was built on a large canal system, which was used for trade. Modern life has definitely come to Franeker, but they do their best to mask it from view. The streets are still brick and cobblestone, and there is very little motor traffic (mostly walkers and bikes). None of the architecture from the 1600s has changed that I could see.

Then we went back to Suzanne and Harold’s place for coffee, cake, and relaxation. (S & H observe the Dutch tradition of koffie en cake at around 3:00 each afternoon. I was happy to join in, because it’s, you know…cake.)

They have a beautiful home with gardens both in the front and back, with a “catio” Harold built for their three cats: Brahms, Mozart, and Rachmaninoff (“Rocky”) — all three Ragdoll cats with velvet fur.

This is where I’d like to say a huge thank-you to Harold. He took three days out of his vacation from work to schlep around his wife and her crazy friend back and forth to Amsterdam twice, and to sightsee and help us find trams and trains and our way around the city, and to basically be our go-to guy for every little thing, including being my translator at the electronics store when I realized I’d brought the wrong adapter for the electrical outlets, and being beyond patient with my endless Dutch questions and general yammering.

Superstar right here.

He is a dear, sweet man and a wonderful friend. I love you, Harold! You’re the best.

And now, Suzanne and I are back in our hotel rooms in Amsterdam, where we’ll have breakfast in the morning and jet off to Vienna. I’ll talk to you once we’ve gotten through Day Three!

Hugs from Nederland.

 

Day 1 – Amsterdam

The 17th century is everywhere here.

Groetjes uit Nederland!

Greetings from the Netherlands, fiends! (Thanks Suzi, for checking my Dutch!)

This Odyssey started in all kinds of sketchy ways, but once I was actually over here, it’s been magic.

I won’t go into great detail, but I’ll give you this overview:

  1. I will never, ever, ever, ever again fly overseas in economy class. Never. Not ever. I may have to skip an Odyssey next year to save up for the fare, but…yeah.
  2. Rain when the plane left Cleveland, and rain upon landing in Toronto. Blah.
  3. The distance between the point at which I stepped off the plane in Toronto and onto my connecting flight to Amsterdam is equivalent to seven football fields. Maybe eight.
  4. Google says I walked (ran/hiked/shuffled/”excuse me, sorry, I’m gonna miss my plane!”) 5.3 miles. I believe it.
  5. Screaming, tantrum-throwing toddlers love to follow me around.

Fortunately, all of that fell into unimportance when I walked through the door at the terminal at Schiphol and saw Suzanne and Harold, holding a sign with my name on it. How fun!

After leaving their car at the train station, we took off for our hotel. The beautiful Mr. Jordaan is located in the oldest neighborhood in Amsterdam, and while I admit I booked it not knowing this at the time, it is a beautiful, quiet area, rich in history.

What I also didn’t know was that this would be the elevator to my room on the 5th floor. Fourteen steps between each floor — once again, Mama Fink got a workout (but a much-needed one, so no complaints here; at least I was carrying only my backpack and purse).

But what a view from my window. And unlike most hotels in cities overrun by tourism (and believe me, this one is), the only sound you hear at night is the occasional scooter going by, or muffled voices from a private canal boat on a late-night excursion. Simply heavenly to be here.

Yes, I’m a ridiculous tourist.

We walked the city, took a tour of the original Heineken brewery (did you know there are notes of banana in Heineken beer? I’m no beer connoisseur, but I smelled it. Fruity, man.), ate some great food, and finished the day with a canal boat tour. Soooo relaxing…I admit there were a few times when I thought I might drift off, as at that point, I’d been up for over 24 hours. (No, I didn’t sleep a single second on the plane; that’s all part of the long story I’m not telling. ;-) )

I especially enjoyed our boat ride, where I could gaze up at the architecture. Back in the 1600s, land was at a premium along the canal, so people built “up.” Tall, skinny buildings with ornate rooftops are everywhere here, including hooks embedded at the tops of the structures in order to lower large furniture and other items down to the pavement — things they still use today, 400 years later. Amazing to look at.

For a late dinner, we went to one of the many pancake houses in the city. I didn’t know this before, but pancakes are serious business to the Dutch. At Suzanne’s recommendation, I ordered  poffertjes — tiny, puffy pancakes in all kinds of decadent decorations and sauces. Harold had butter and whipped cream with his, Suzanne had butter pecan Brazilian cakes with ice cream, and I had the cherry. Unbelievable. I will make these at home, for my own bad self.

After schlepping back to the hotel, it was finally time for bed. Did you know it doesn’t get dark here in the summer till almost 10 p.m.? No matter — nothing was going to keep me from sleeping the sleep of the dead.

But I did so with great memories of my first day, in a beautiful place with great friends.

Until tomorrow — thank you for coming along!

 

Odyssey 2019

Greetings, fiends — it’s been a while, hasn’t it. I’ve missed writing to you!

July, August, and September are a blur to me now. Some good things happened, and I also suffered some. It’s OK. All is well today, and I’m continuing my quest to plan and do things that stretch me as a human, and that I know would make the Thriller happy. I’m missing him bigtime right now. Blah. But he wouldn’t want me to pine or whine about it. So here we go — the big reveal.

Odyssey 2019:

Six fun places

My hope is that I’ll be able to do the Netherlands-Vienna-Salzburg leg with Suzanne. Even if she can’t get away for that, I’ll still enjoy hanging with her in Amsterdam, as she lives about 70 miles from there.

After two days in Vienna, it’s off to Salzburg, where the highlight will be the Sound of Music Movie Tour:-D And natch, I’ll need someone to video me doing the slow singing turn when I climb that mountain (kidding — the mountain is actually in Germany, and the land is privately owned, but the meadow is accessible…) and sing “I Have Confidence” walking down that lane, and “Do Re Mi” while balancing on that fountain. Roll tape.

And what would a trip to Vienna and Salzburg be without a Mozart walk? We’ll likely start there, as I know Suzi is a Mozart fan as well (she has a kitty named Mozart, and another named Brahms!). And don’t forget the sausages, the biergartens, the outdoor festivals, the castles and the Alps.

After saying goodbye to Suzanne, I’ll finish the trip with a visit to Bob and Kay’s home in Slovenia. They’ve been living there on and off regularly since who knows when, and I’ve never visited them there.

I wish it was today.

But hey, there’s Shrek work to be done, and groceries to buy, and bulbs to plant. We’ll just have to see how that auger drill bit I bought works for digging the holes. I hope you’re all doing great! Till next time…