
Today's the day! Hope you all have a great one.
This was on the way from London Gatwick, England, to Amsterdam Schiphol, Netherlands. It looks like a castle far off the distance in the clouds. So pretty!!
Sunset over the water off the coast of Holland. The black dot in the upper right quadrant (whoo, pre-algebra jargon strikes again!) is actually a buoy in the water. Buuuuuuuuuuuuuuooooooooooy!
Coming into the Netherlands, on the coast. Maybe Zaandfoort? Like heck if I know for sure, I ain't never been to no Dutch beaches b'foh.
Yay!! Land!! I didn't realize Holland was so green. And guess what. I use Holland and the Netherlands interchangeably. The funny thing here was you could actually see aaaaaaaall the rivers and inlets and dikes and things criss-crossing over the land.
And then. It was the horribleness.
We arrive at the airport. It's late, like 10:30pm. Freaking Saturday night. I make it through immigration, I go to the luggage claim, I wait and wait and wait, and never, ever, ever see my backpack. Everyone gets their stuff, they leave, and honestly, it's all deserted. Then it's down to me and this one other young guy.
UGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My bag never made it!!! I filled out a report, and thought maybe it just got lost or something ... :(.
In short: they totally and completely lost my baggage because there were NO tags whatsoever on it. And yes, I never ever ever see it again and get no compensation. Yet. I am working on it.
Ugh, honestly, it was one of the worst things I have ever been through, it was so bad. And I kind of don't like talking about it. But somehow I made it. Though Schiphol Airport will never be the same for me again.
And - slight non-sequitur- AirBerlin is the freaking suckiest, raunchiest, most horrible, grating, BOTCHED UP airline to have to deal with "if you DECIDE TO BUY A VERY CHEAP TICKET." Quoting them, btw. Yeah, I totally deserve to be punished FOR BUYING A VERY CHEAP TICKET. More on that later, beeches!
Of all the places to go into without any stuff, on a crowded Saturday night, good thing it was Amsterdam! I just had my newly purchased yellow backpack with all my goods stuffed inside, and I knew where I was going, didn't have to ask for directions, I knew there would be people around and it wouldn't be all scary and deserted, and I got to stay at the Shelter!!! I love this place. I worked here straight out of college for 4 months and it totally changed my life. I come here every chance I get.
So I got to stay in a smaller room, maybe 6 people. All girls. It. Was. So. Stinkin. Gnarly. Hot. Un-be-freakin'-lievable. I was all looking forward to a shower and resting and whatnot. Um, it didn't much happen. Amsterdam was HOT! And MUGGY!! Yes, I was a bit miserable. No shower cuz I had no clothes to change into anyway. But it was so nice to be back there and I like that place a lot.
I was debating which church to head to on Sunday, then I heard about a service in THE EVENING (yay!) so decided to go to that so I could sleep in a bit and hang out and stuff. I honestly do not really remember whatall I did during that day. Probably got out and walked around a bit. Probably went to Albert Heijn (my faaaaaaaaaaavorite supermarket there because they have amazing frickin' kipcurriesalat which blows my cotton-pickin' mind - chicken curry salad, that is. And Fanta! Don't you? Wanta? Fanta?!?)
And I am pretty sure I probably walked over to a gorgeous, calm, and serene little park that I found when I stayed there in '99. I used to walk there with my guitar to play and sing and relax and sit on the green, grassy banks next to the canal, and wave back at the people going by on boats. I loved that place.
This time, when I went back, I found out the name of the park - Wertheim Park. I'd always known it was in the old Jewish quarter, not too far from the big Portuguese Synagogue, but this time I noticed a big glassy monument. Apparently, the ashes of Jewish victions of the Auschwitz concentration camp are interred there. Wow! I never knew! No wonder that place was always so calm and quiet, with an underlying tinge of sadness. I am so totally all about it, and it is now probably one of my all-time favorite corners of the earth. Even more so because of the history attached to it. One of the panels of the monument was boarded up, and I don't know if it was vandalism or repair, or what. If it was vandalism, I hope that person gets some strict justice, because that's just sick and wrong. But I love that park. With the cute little gorgeous fencing and gate. And tinkly drippy fountain.
When I went there I did see, and smile at, and nod at this lady walking her dog. There is a circular path in this little park, and I remember going one way while she went the other - then we met up in the middle, near the water. She stopped, and started looking around behind her, and I thought she lost or dropped something. I walked up to her, and she asked me if I'd seen a little dog. Um, there was a dog totally standing behind her the whole time. I pointed this out to her, and asked her if she had two dogs. Nope, just the one! She laughed and started teasingly scolding the dog. I know I heard the name of that ditzy little dog but for the life of me I cannot remember what the dog was called. It was two syllables, though. I'm too lazy to check my journal now :P.
So a group of us got together at the hostel in the evening to walk to the church. Zolder 50. I think. We were told it was a 10 minute walk away. I'm like, that's fine. HAHAHAHAHAHAHA! It was all the way across the entire dang city!! What kind of Dutch 10 minutes were they talking about, I have no freaking clue or idea. Apparently Zolder means "attic" in Dutch and that is where the church is. Steep, steep, practically ladderlike steps up to the top floor where it was unBEARably sweat-inducing dripping hot and then people would shut the windows for - I don't even know why.
I met a nice Dutch guy who was working as a cleaner at the sister hostel to the Shelter City, who had just become a Christian the week before. I wished him a happy birthday!
During worship I saw a big black man in the corner (no, not a demon, an actual person!!) with his hands in the air, shaking them around and jumping all around and I have NO idea why but the very memory makes me want to weep even now. Just watching him worship that night sent me in rivers of tears and tears and drippy drippy tears. I still don't get why I react this way, but I totally do. There was just something really special, and happy, about it.
I saw him later at the hostel, and found out he was staying there while waiting for a flat and job and other stuff to open up - I think it was already in the works. I forget his name. But his accent threw me so I didn't know what the heck he was saying when I first asked him where he was from. He was from Sierra Leone!! Wowee. The place where during the civil war they would chop off people's arms and legs and mutilate them. Ugh. He was so peaceful and calm and smiley, though.
And he told me that he used to be Muslim, but became a Christian when someone invited him to hear a preacher. And he actually had no interest in hearing any of it, but he went to be polite, and became a Christian then and there after hearing the preacher speak. Hm.
You just meet cool people in Amsterdam, you really do.
So then.
So walking back from the church, we saw these huge ole flowers! Someone said they were hollyhocks. I choose to believe them because I have no green thumb or any such thing approximating it.
The entire street was lined with them.
This was at a street corner, and then I took a closer look at the window.
I love all the architectural and structural details of this fascade, and you wanna know the cool thing about the flower-surrounded building?? It's a ballet studio.
balletstudio
Marieke van der Heiden
:) How very very frenchy, and appropriate.
Since we were in less of rush leaving the church, and since it gets dark there much later, we stopped along the way and took pictures. I simply MUST show you the befores (above) ...
and the afters. Several of the pics you've seen so far have already been edited from being big black blobnesses. Yikes, eh??? I am so glad I found photo-editing stuff. How the heck did people used to do this before computers and automatic adjustments with the touch of a button and a click of an icon? Huh? Huh?
I love gorgeous quaint Amsterdam - this is the view over one of the many bridges, to the tree-lined streets/canals.
The famous!! Amsterdam! Bikes! Which get stolen all the time so you have to lock everything up. And everyone goes everywhere on bike. Even tourists.
I somehow really like the neat row of boats parked to the side. Tour boats? Rentals? I don't know.
Now they look like shoes.
This was on the way back trying to trek back across the city. I have a feeling this is near Kalverstraat, a big shopping street. With like three H&M's on it!! (Best store for clothes, I think, overall in Europe. ) I LOVE this building! And the McDonald's right next to it. :) If you noticed the big "fish hook" at the top of the McDonald's building, those are on pretty much every building. They built the houses and doors so narrow, and the steps and stairs inside were so steep and narrow, that you couldn't bring furniture in through them. They actually used a pulley in the big hook and tied furniture with ropes to swing it up and through the windows. Thusly, all the houses are built leaning outward slightly, toward the street, so the furniture wouldn't scrape up against the front of the house when they were hoisting it up.
I also met a couple of other very nice American girls traveling alone as well, and they were part of the group that went to Zolder 50. (Now I think 50 is just the number of the church building.)
I told them about one of my favorite places to eat in Amsterdam - I went several times in my other stays there, and the food was good, and cheap, and there was a beaaaaautiful terrace out back along a junction of 3 canals. So you got good traffic there and a wonderful view!! It is called ...
So we stopped there and had a bite - and I had the tom kai gai, which was one of my first experiences with Thai food. Yes, in Amsterdam. Me, Hannah from Indiana, and Dawn (from San Diego and only 17!! Travelling by herselfs!! Whoa.)
Night shot! I love the moon out that night.
We were all big picture takers, and I was still getting used to the camera, so we stopped (OK, so mostly it was me stopping) for snapshot moments. The building here is De Waag, the old weighing house. It now has a coffee shop (actual coffee, at this one) on the lower floor. It is in the Nieuwmarkt square, one of the city's landmarks. The hostel where I stayed is on a little side street just to the left of the weigh house, along the bridge which is in front of De Waag. It so totally looks like Disneyland to me. It looks like Cinderella's castle.
And as I was trying to find the actual PROPER spelling of "Nieuwmarkt," I found the site for De Waag.
This is along the street/canal walking back to the hostel, and you can see De Waag at the far end to the right. I think it is a famous building, but I forget what it's for. I think we are along Oudezijds Voorburgwal. It's either that, or Oudezijds Achterburgwal, but honestly - with names like that, who can remember? One is by De Waag and the other is in the Red Light District. That's all I know. :P
Dawn and I arranged to do our own thing in the morning the next day, but meet up to go through the Anne Frank House in the afternoon. The line was long and the house and sun were both mightily hot. It was mostly tourists. But the line moved fast. And no student (or teacher!) discounts! I now wish I had gone to the Anne Frank Huis in either 1998/1999, or 2004, when I was last in Europe with my sister. I know they have done major renovations. In 1998, it was just the one building, and the exhibits were different. In 2004, I think it was under construction and not totally open. It just would have been neat to see and make comparisons on how they have changed it. I spoke with other people who said they liked the original exhibits better, they were more organic and authentic. The original building where the Frank family hid was 3 down from the corner - the museum has now expanded through the two adjacent buildings down to the street corner, and it's all silvery and spacey-looking. It's worth a look if you go and are interested, though. I find myself drawn to all the museums of Jewish history now, for some reason.
So I snuck a picture of Anne's room, though that is not allowed. And lemme tell way, I waited a GOOD LONG WHILE for people to stop streaming in and crowding the rooms, so I could get an empty room shot! Dawn ended up leaving first because I got stuck so far behind. Hee. But I think it was worth it.
They have left her pictures that she put on the wall, just protected by the plastic, but per her father Otto Frank's request, have left it unfurnished, as it was when he returned. I think shortly after it was turned into a museum, they did try to reconstruct what it looked like while the family and others were living there, with period pieces and such, but Mr. Frank preferred it like this.
This is the view directly in front of the house, from a bench along the street.
Do you SEE why it is NOT a good idea to swim in the canals???? I swear, if you fall in, they take you IMMEDIATELY to the hospital and give you shots for like 77 different diseases. EW! Wanna know why???
Because houseboats like this little beauty dump waste directly into the canals, that IS the sewage system!!! This is just a little ways up the street from the Anne Frank Huis. It's actually not a lived-in houseboat, but a floating advertisement for the Tulip Museum up the street. Hence all the flowers.
At the end of the road, near the Westerkirk, is this Memorial to Anne. Someone had laid flowers there on the day I was there.
The corner, showing the street sign for the Westermarkt, Centrum (meaning city center).
Anne's spirit, flying away?? :)
It's a pretty cool shot, but that's what I get for despising pigeons and kicking at them - cool shots. ;)
Not far from Dam Square, the main open square in the city, I'd always walked past this sign for a TAIWANESE RESTAURANT in Amsterdam! I usually would cross on the other side, and I never made it to actually go in and check it out. So I did, finally, this time, and realized it was just the same old weird gross greasy shiny junky Chinese stuff that everybody has. And once again, with the ubiquitous bikes. The corner of ... the Rathaus? Or is that German? That's German! Never mind! I think this is a back turret of the OLD City Hall/Post Office ... which is now totally a giant mall inside. 3 levels. I nearly got my hair cut as a model there, in 1999. At least, that's what I tell myself, when I volunteered because they were looking for people to demonstrate haircuts on. But I ... accidentally gave them the wrong number of the hostel, since I didn't have it memorized.
There are just SUCH cool details on the building, and beautiful skies. Though I remember it being hot. Like in the Anne Frank Huis. So I had to go and sit in the shade in free benches near the Westerkirk. And people watch. Yeah, spying. I love it.
See? I totally spied on this guy. NO clue in Hades who he is, but I made a guess that he was Italian. I just got that vibe. There was something about the way he was sauntering down the street in his jaunty little way that caught my eye. And I always like a suit! Especially when it's 95 degrees out and I'm sweltering in t-shirt and shorts (yes, the same t-shirt and shorts that I'd arrived in the city with 3 days prior, because that was the situation I was in!!!!). Him, in that heat, with that amount of clothes on, was definitely impressive.
Ooooh, stalker. :)
You can see how truly narrow the streets are, though, and how crowded during the summer. I still love. I would so love to actually quit and take a year off and work there or something. But it'd be weird, because most of the people that end up working at the hostel are like, barely getting out of their teens!! Ack, culture gap.
More on Amsterdam next time. And then ... WORLD CUP GERMANY, 2006!!!! :) My prime reason for this summer's trip. :)
End Amsterdam part 1.
then I see a giant sign in front of the tube station, a whiteboard, upon which is written a message saying that the station is now closed because of something that happened along the line. So I can't even take the tube. Wretched!!!
So I decide to walk to the next tube station in the general direction I'm headed ... and I see some nice cute things, actually. This was near Portobello Road. There were ... Japanese, I think, though they could have possibly also been Korean ... models doing a photo shoot in front of a vegetable stand. I came around so I wouldn't be in their shot, but that's when they decided to pack up and move on down the street!!! These girls were very "typical Asian model" and all kitten-faced and doll-like and super-teeny-built-like-a-bird. You can see the head of one of them (there were two) between the girl in the hat and skirt and the bleached-headed guy in the lime green shirt. The guy on the very right was the photographer.
I love this door and gate. The hinges and scrolly metal accents are great. I want something like this someday. And it goes so great with the cobblestone!
I also came upon the teeniest little side street. I don't know if these were all houses. There was actually a giant barred gate between the main street and this little side street. I got this shot by sticking the camera between the bars. I love how it looks totally like olden days, and little, London. Gorgeous! Frenchy! Looking! House. Great colors, great shutters, great roof and I love the flowers. :)
Hee hee. Y'all know why I took a pictures of this, right?
Some random shop window: My favorite is the one on the bottom far left. Go, big London style. Who the heck would want to wear a GYNECOLOGIST patch, though??
I got on a couple buses, and missed stops because I didn't know what they looked like and it was hard to read the little bus stop and street signs indicating the stops, but this looked too gorgeous to pass up. Kensington Gardens. Lots of people strolling around in the afternoon, I took a picture for one cute little couple.
Somehow ended up going past Picadilly Circus again; this was the Eros statue.
Another French-looking building. These pictures are mostly taken from the city bus - a big red double decker, actually! I love the colors of this building. No idea what it was but I did see cafe tables along the street and ground floor.
So I wanted to take the bus all the way back to Victoria Station so I could see more. I'd seen Tower Bridge before, but that was about it. It was actually quite difficult trying to switch bus lines, and find the right stops, especially when there were one-way streets and I wouldn't know which way the bus was headed, necessarily, especially if the stop was around a traffic circle :(.
However, I did find buses which went past Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament. I will definitely have to spend more time there next time because that building is GORJAMUSS!
Trying to get back to Victoria station ...
This is the London Eye on the left, and in the middle are the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben. Whee.
So, since it was getting dark, it actually became MUCH harder to find anything. As a matter of fact, I got waaaaaaaaay seriously lost. Lost for about 3 hours. Got off at the wrong bus stop, couldn't find the alternate bus stop for the next route, decided to get fish n chips one last time. Ended up half-eating my fish at the bus stop outside some art school with loads of students milling around about to go out clubbing or something. Ended up in the pitch black on some unknown street wandering around just trying to get my bearings. Asked a young African woman if I was on the right side of the street to catch a bus to Victoria station - she told me to go to the other side - so I did - then I asked the bus driver before I got on, if it was right - and he tells me I'm on the wrong side ... :/
I do finally get on the correct bus. I'm in the back, top deck, and wave to random people in double-deckers behind me. I swear they waved first. Two young girls with long hair. They got a kick of out of it. It's also weird to be 15 feet up in the air but 3 feet away from someone in another bus - because that's how far away you are from the people in the bus behind you, when you are in the last row on the upper deck.
Gah. By the time I got back to Crawley, it was freaking MIDNIGHT. And I'd been trying to get to Victoria since SIX PM. :(
Woe is to the me-ness!
I walk back to my uncle's place all freaked and skeeved out, since it's midnight, and dark, and I'm alone - but mostly it's safe. I knock on the door, and then window, because I'm not trying to wake up the whole dang neighborhood. I have to knock like 5 times before my uncle opens the door. He pokes his head through the curtains to the living room window, first, though. He's totally up, and randomly playing guitar there. Also had been drinking, so I don't think he heard me, lol. I apologize to him for coming back so late, and tell him I got majorly lost, and he nods and goes back to the living room while I head upstairs and just CRASH.
The next morning he says he's glad to see me, because he says he doesn't remember hearing me come home the night before. Haha!! I told him that he's the one that let me in. He admits to drinking a bit too much and says at least I made it back safely.
Truer words were never spoken!!
I love the eclecticism of London architecture. I think what first caught my eye were all the flags in the windows, and they also had loads of Asian accents inside. No idea what that big thing on the corner of the building is supposed to be, but there were figures of children all over it. I think at first I thought it was a giant peacock with tail.
So I crossed the street to take better pictures of it and then I saw ... apparitions!!!
Aaaauuugh!! A ghost in the window!!! Staring a baneful, deathly glare. I like watching people in windows. (My name is Luka - I live on the second floor ...) And then!!! He left and she came. And stood there. And looked. And I took a couple shots. Then she smiled in this one (you probably can't see it too well) but about 2 seconds after I took this picture she started waving at me across the street, which was pretty cute. I might need to go try that restaurant next time I'm in town. Friendliness in a foreign country is super nice.
Then Lex suggested we head on over to Camden. By then shops were closed and stuff but it was still kinda of interesting. We did go there again later in the summer, before I flew back to the States, and it is totally different during the day when things are open - I almost kind of like things better quiet, and deserted. You can wander around and not be aggravated by hordes of peepholes.
A lot of the shop facades had giant things above them, such as ...
We headed on over to an older part of the street, and wandered in towards little cafes, and shops, and all sorts of nooks and crannies. Towards the back we came upon this: I love antiques, but pretty much nothing was open at that time of day anymore. I guess in the olden days it really did used to be a horse hospital, and after they converted it to quaint (and actually, very Goth and super vampy/trendy/pricey) shopping, they retained the name. I felt quite an affinity for all the stonework and the old buildings and stuff. They'd converted the old stables into various antique and global goods-type shops.
I love this view!! Maybe they used to use it to lead sick, ailing, lame horses to the two different levels. It makes me wonder what it used to be like back in the day. So we walked around the back, and started back towards the front, and I saw this cute little red rick-shaw!! It was outside this store that ended up being HUGE inside (when I went back later), with stuff from Africa and hand-wrought copper sculptures (neato seashell-shaped candlestick that I thought was £17 but was actually like £300 or something, ha) inside. So I took a pic.
Then I walked around and looked again and got a huge shock, cuz seriously:
What the heck, dudes. I mean, what is that supposed to mean?? How macabre. And amusing. Because I think there was a monkey in there as well. And maybe even a shrunken head.
Then of course, Lex has to quip: "Are we therrrrre yet???"
Ha!!
One last pic on the road before we went our separate ways:
Hah. I took this pic at the station while the doors were open and that was it!