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| Jente, DawnO, RobO |
| A one-handed bra removal contest. Yes, that’s the Queen’s head on each manaquin |
| The scene in the city centre |
| Palio Superspeed Donkey – My new favorite Amsterdam band |
![]() |
| Jente, DawnO, RobO |
| A one-handed bra removal contest. Yes, that’s the Queen’s head on each manaquin |
| The scene in the city centre |
| Palio Superspeed Donkey – My new favorite Amsterdam band |
| Anne |
Hoi everyone. It’s been a while and we have done a lot of Europy stuff since we last wrote so I’ll get right to it. On Tuesday we began our day at the Anne Frank house. It was was quite amazing and recommend it to anyone that has the opportunity to see it. Later that day we took a train to Den Haag, a smaller city outside of Amsterdam. Once again we couch surfed, this time on Albert’s couch. He was a fantastic host and his place was incredible. He has a habit of constantly hosting travellers so when we arrived we were greeted by 4 french girls, 3 Estonian girls and 2 Italian girls cooking supper. Most of them were also staying at the house but there was plenty of room.
The next day Albert lent us bikes so we could ride to Leiden. From there we met our friend Jente and took a bus to the Keukenhof which is the worlds largest flower garden which mainly contains tulips. I’ve never seen DawnO so camera happy. I’ll include some flower pictures below but if you want to see more we can provide. Once it was checked off DawnO’s bucket list we took a bus back to Leiden and discovered our bikes were missing. We found out that we had parked them in a no bike parking zone and every day the cops come by and load up all the bikes in that area and impound them somewhere on the other side of town. The sign indicating the parking zones was about the size of a sugar packet and was in Dutch so we were destined to fail. Leiden must make a lot of money off that tourist tax because there were at least 30 other bikes parked there when we dropped ours off and 30 more when we found out they were gone. Sadly we had to leave them behind and tell Albert their fate. The next day he was gracious enough to drive to Leiden and pick them up for us after he dropped us off at the train station.
| Gouda |
| Delft Potter |
| Wheels of Gouda |
| Queen’s Day Preparations |
| Tourists |
| Welcome to the tulip pictures |
| Twisted Tulips |
| These looked freshly painted |
| Hair-lips |
| Ok, so maybe the Dutch were watching Kate and William |
today we got a first hand experience about how the Amsterdam police services work. wow, i bet you are thinking about all kinds of different reasons why we could be involved with the police.
nope, not espionage, drug trafficking, public intoxication, urinating in public, etc.
our experience was something much less dramatic.
we have rented bikes through our friend Jente’s transit card because the rate is much better than the tourist bikes. yesterday we had a great day biking through the waterlands just north of amsterdam. we saw different types of birds and small dutch farming villages.
we went out for dinner last night at a turkish restaurant just down the street from Jente’s place (where we’re staying). my bike lock was pretty finicky, so robO locked both of our bikes up together. we sat at a patio table about 10 feet from where they were. sometime during the course of our dinner someone came along and stole the key which was still in my bike lock. taking the key out activates the wheel lock for the back tire, thus making the bike un-rideable. (we have learned since that bike thiefs hope that you’ll abandon the bike, then they come along with the key and steal it.) so we carried the 40 pound bike home and locked it to rob’s for the night.
in the morning we obviously had to take the bike back to the shop (which is about a 20 minute bike ride away). we had the great idea that rob would ride his bike in, while i would take the un-rideable bike on the tram. what we didn’t know is that bikes are not allowed on trams. of course this was learned AFTER we had already split up.
i carried the f#&king bike about a third of the way, then realized that we would be in more trouble if we also ended up losing eachother (as it was taking me a ridiculous amount of time to get to the meeting point and i had no communication options i.e.cell phone). so i abandoned the bike in a busy area and took the tram to meet rob.
of course the klootzaks (Jente taught us the dutch word for a$$holes) at the bike shop made me feel like the stupidest person on earth to abandon the bike to which some stranger has the key (even though it was in a different area of town) and told us that we would likely have to pay for a WHOLE NEW bike (400 euros). robO doubled me back to rescue the bike and we went to the police station to make a report for the missing key (as directed by the klootzaks).
we took turns carrying that MoFo bike back to the shop, where they told us we have to mail in our police report to determine our fate. (note: on they actually sell new locks at this shop for a total of 80 euro.) so we will post an update when we get the damages. funny thing is that when Jente called she spoke with a different guy who said “don’t worry about it – people lose their keys all the time. just bring it in and we’ll deal with it”.
anyway, we salvaged our day by going on a hop-on, hop-off tour around amsterdam’s beautiful canals. of course, we were so tired from carrying the bike that we actually never “hopped off”, but saw many of the highlights.
on tap for the next couple of days: Anne Frank House and a trip to a few neighbouring towns.
| the offending bike |
| heron |
| robO’s ride |
| imagine if you forgot where you parked… |
| robO thought they were saying “kennel”and was looking for dogs. ha ha canal! |
| south church |