Holland, Before, During, and After

The Train Game

            In an interesting twist on late trains, my Hamburg departure was actually 15 minutes late (so far it’s always been the arrivals that are late).  Thankfully, a friendly German filled me in on what was happening, which was especially helpful because the electronic sign on my platform which had been announcing that my train would leave from there simply switched to announce a different train, which would have been rather unnerving without my new friend there to translate the message from the loudspeaker.  Anyway, this all caused me to miss my next train, which I was pretty sure I could not afford to miss and still make it to Amsterdam that day.  Turns out there was still one more train coming an hour later that would get me there in time.  Which it did.  In the end, I took 7 trains from Stockholm to Bergen #2, with virtually no time waiting in between, from 6am one day to 1am the following day.
           
From ‘burg to Bergen

            The train on Hamburg was standing room only.  My first class pass was useless there.  I had to set my bags on a stack of empty bottles and lean against a window in the dining car.  Good news: the Germans took it all in stride and were quite friendly.  I enjoyed a decent conversation with a cool dude for the duration of the 2-hour ride.  He used his phone to look up train schedules for me, showing me that I could still make it to Amsterdam that night even though I was late (see above).  We’re now facebook friends, too :)
            One one of my next trains, approaching the Germany/Netherlands border, I noticed something unusual.  The passengers were decidedly less sophisticated looking (and behaving) than those from all my previous trains.  The neighborhoods we passed through (farms and small towns) also looked rather rundown, even scary.  It reminded me of deepest, darkest rural hillbilly country in America.  I could easily picture weird stuff going on in those shanties, like the dude who kept his daughter and their children in his basement for years.  It made me sad.
            The moment I crossed the border into the Netherlands, things picked up completely.  Almost night and day.  Suddenly, houses were neat and tidy, farms much better kept, weeds kept at bay.  On a much smaller scale and in a rural rather than urban fashion, it reminded me of being in El Paso, Texas, looking across the river to the slums of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.  It’s amazing how a border, which is an imaginary line drawn by men, can make such a difference.
            Deeper into the Netherlands, and after passing through a few towns, I found myself impressed with how tidy and pretty of a land it is.  The Dutch seem to take real pride of ownership.  Darkness fell and obscured the landscape, so that’s all I can say about that.
            Finally, my uncle Ton met me at Amsterdam Centraal Station, from where we grabbed the last possible train out to Bergen.  He then drove me to my hostel, where I enjoyed my tiny and hard little bed immensely.

Hurdles

            Getting into Holland was arduous; getting out of Holland actually proved to be a real difficulty.  The next day, the guy whose Nice apartment I had booked contacted me to tell me that I needed to be there by 8pm at the latest.  That’s fine, the French high speed train could get me there by 7:30.  But could I actually book said train?  Online, no: the website wouldn’t allow me to use my pass to book the train.  Calling the train service to book a seat (at over 50 cents a minute) led to the line cutting out after I finally got a person on the other end.  No matter, we drove to the train terminal to book me a seat in person.  The lady there said I had to use the phone service.  I asked if she could at least look up how many vacant seats were available (remember, I was getting pressure from apartment guy and I needed to know if I was going to make it in time).  She retorted in the negative, and seemed upset that I had asked, saying, “You might as well go to the baker and ask him!”.  So I got on the phone again, paying them my 50 cents a minute to slowly ask me if I wanted to fill out a customer service survey after I had spoken to a representative.  The answer from the phone office: we can’t do that, you must go to the station.  I asked the same question as I had asked at the station: how many seats were available to Nice, or perhaps even just to Paris?  The answer: none.  Swell.  I cancelled my reservation in Nice.
            Not knowing where I would be the next few days, nor how I would get there, was actually quite liberating.  With no looming deadlines, I felt free to enjoy myself.  Which I did.

Three Dutch Uncles

            My day with Ton was very full and very interesting.  My hostel (more a boarding house than a hostel, really) provided breakfast (which consisted of ham, cheese, bread, Nutella, jam, and coffee), but I only stuck around long enough to make myself a dry ham and cheese sandwich because every seat in the place was taken and filled with a loud-talking 60-or-older Dutch person, and I felt like they were all staring at me, the only one in the room not part of their group.
            Funny note on breakfast: the next day, armed with the knowledge of what to expect, I decided to get in and out quickly.  I grabbed a slice of raisin bread and put some Nutella on it, then hastily made myself a sandwich with small slices of dark brown bread (which I assumed were whole-grain and fiber-rich) to take with me for lunch.  At lunchtime, my sandwich was especially delicious and unique-tasting.  It turns out my slices of pumpernickel were actually ginger spice bread.  Frankly, with the right combination of ham, turkey, and muenster cheese, gingerbread makes an awesome sandwich!  The other mistake I made (adding buttermilk – I think that’s what it was – to my coffee) was a great deal less serendipitous and I cannot recommend repeating it.
            I would write at length about my time with my uncles, because we did, saw, and talked about a lot, but I imagine it’s more interesting to me because we’re family.  Briefly then, Ton arranged for me to meet with my sculptor/artist uncle Gerard and my “man of leisure” uncle Kees, only not at the same time, due to their schedules.  I was very pleased that each uncle made an effort to visit with me even though I arrived with only a few days’ notice.  Ton and I drove around a ton of countryside, across some dikes, through some cute towns, and more.  I saw two of Gerard’s sculptures, which were on public outdoor display (where cities had commissioned him to make them), which was a pretty cool thing.  I ate a lovely dinner at a nice marina on a lake, then walked around a seaside fishing village.  Good times.
Lunch with Ton and Gerard.  They didn't know I had whipped out my camera, hence the real-life action shot haha.

Ton and Kees at the local library.  The books in the display have all been hand-bound by Ton.  The display honors a late local mystic, and are generally on magnetism and the occult.

Coolest 3D book cover I've seen lately, dunno about you


Holland.  As flat as predicted.



Dinner.  Almost all protein and fat.  Dr. Atkins would approve.

Canal at the marina where we ate

One of Gerard's sculptures in Urk

Another one.  How cool is that?  This is part of a sad memorial honoring the local fishermen who lost their lives at sea :(




I find this amusing. What a clever way to increase square footage of your house without impinging on the pedestrian walkway.

Sunset as seen from a gigantic dyke.



            By the way, Bergen is a really cute town.  We had no time to walk it, but it was really, really cute.  Only 15,000 population but filled with cute shops, twisty streets, artsy café’s, and the like.  It’s actually a destination, and it deserves to be.  Check it out sometime!
Pretty sure this is Bergen, but if so, it's not even the quaint and cute part, that's how quaint and cute the town is.
Leaving Las Vegas (ish)

            The next morning, Ton dropped me off at the train station and wished me well.  An hour later, I was finally at Amerstdam Centraal Station, the place where a person really can procure tickets!  After only 20 minutes’ wait in the “Service and Tickets” line, I met a grumpy lady who turned me away, saying that for international information I needed to go to the other end of the station.  I would have liked it if they had only included the single word “Domestic” in the “Service and Tickets” sign.  Sigh. 
            Almost an hour and a half later, I got to the front of the international line and found a friendly and helpful man who helped me to work out a destination and how to get there.  I told him I just needed to get out of town, and any of several destinations I listed would be fine.  He perked up when I mentioned Nice and that I wouldn’t mind taking a night train; fewer than 10 minutes and $80 later, I had an 8:30pm appointment with the night train to Zurich, followed by three more day trains, final destination Nice. 
            This left me with about 7 hours to explore Amsterdam, which was an unexpected bonus.  I went to drop off my heavy pack at a locker in the station, but there was some security issue, and only Dutch people were allowed to use the lockers.  So I did my snail impression in Amsterdam, carrying my “home” on my back and going rather slowly---only leaving a less noticeable trail.
            Amsterdam, at least the part reachable by a heavily-laden tourist venturing on foot from the train station, is actually kinda gross.  I wasn’t expecting much from a city known for drugs and prostitution (I saw both), but I was still surprised by how dirty it was and how smutty it felt.  The city was filled, just filled, with sidewalk cafés, yet few of them seemed welcoming.  I was actually happy to retreat to the train station after only about 3 hours in town.  Well, and to be fair, the station permitted me, as a first class traveler, to wait in their first class lounge, where there was free internet, free drinks, clean restrooms (with no need to pay!), and cozy, quiet seating.  That just rocked so much.
The aforementioned classy lounge


So much potential to be a cool city, but so much grime bringing it down . . .

Miscellaneous Notes on Nederlanders

- they don’t stop for anybody.  Not pedestrians, not bicycles, not even other cars.  One must keep on one’s toes or have them run over.
- they still ride bikes like nobody’s business.  They are everywhere.  They even have separate bike lanes on all the major streets.  Not just a token painted line, either, they get their own lanes with treed or cobblestoned dividers sometimes.  
The rumors are true: the Dutch still love their bikes.
- they have canals everywhere.  In the country, they have drawbridges above or tunnels going beneath them.  In the city, they have sightseeing boats driving swiftly up and down them.
- they are tall.  I know I said Norwegians are tall, but this is different.  In Norway, the people are all sturdily built but come in many different heights (with the tall ones coming really tall).  In Holland, they have more slender builds, but everybody is tall, only not often exceptionally tall.  It’s like the average height for both men and women in Holland is 3 inches taller than in America, but the range of heights is much smaller.  They’re all tall, but they’re almost all equally tall.  This is rather fascinating to behold.

Massive Day of Travel (With Plenty of Time to Write About It)

Speedy Getaway

            Currently on the train through Denmark.  Hi, Danes!  I got on this train with about 2 minutes to spare.  In one of those lovely habits they seem to have in this part of the world, they often tell you a train will be in one spot, then move it to another, making the announcement in the native language only.  Had I not asked the service worker if I was at the right train, I would have missed it.  Ungood!
            So the train from Sweden was amusing, too.  They call it the X2000 (LOL at the forward-looking 80’s name!) and it’s something of a fast train.  Not like a “bullet” train – it still rode on regular rails – it was more of an “arrow” train. It only went about twice the speed of road traffic, not 3 or 4 times.  Also awesome was that my car on the train (the first class car, one of the saving graces of my rail pass is that it’s always first class, which is about 25% nicer than regular seating) had a malfunctioning suspension.  Had it been working, I never would have noticed that the other cars on the train actually leaned into the turns quite a bit (not the rails, just the cars), making for a smoother ride.  Our car had us rocking and rolling, with people’s luggage and drinks falling over, plus tons more bumps and jolts than the other cars had.  I just love the irony: we were in the “luxury” car.  Oh, and the fast train . . . arrived late.  Go ‘bagas!
            I had a great view of southern Sweden, or, more accurately, the trees next to the railroad track of southern Sweden.  I thought there would be some similarity to Norway, but there really wasn’t any.  Just flat, green, trees . . . it reminded me of south central Texas, near Austin, but a little less hilly.  


            Speaking of Texas, I saw an actual Dodge Ram 4x4 throttling around Stockholm.  With gas costing about $9 a gallon, I bet he was the only kid on his block with a pickup truck. 

What A Train Taught Me About Cars

            This trip marks the first time I have done any real amount of travel by train.  I think I don’t speak too soon when I say that I greatly prefer driving a car, even though it is generally more physically draining.  There are two reasons for this:
            First, from inside a car, you see the world open up before you in all its slightly paved majesty.  From inside a train, you only see the world whizzing past.  I feel caged.
            Second, when you drive your own car, you are the captain of your journey.  Stop when you like, change your plans on a whim, choose an interesting-looking side road.   The train allures you with its big, colorful map looking like it goes everywhere, but in reality you are very limited.  Add the frustration of having to rise really early to catch a train that may or may not be on time to your next destination where you have only 7 minutes to disembark and find your new train, and . . . well, I guess I really don’t love trains right now.  Add to that the fragrant (“Scent of a Man”) fellow sitting behind me on this train and the several repeat coughers and sneezers on the previous train, and now not only do I feel caged, I also need my sawdust and shredded newspaper replaced.
The nicest train cabin I found.  Fragrant passanger pictured.  Notice my strategic move to another seat.

Funniest emergency exit ever.  That's not a lever you pull to pop out the window, it's a hammer you use to smash out the window!  Don't believe me? Read the instructions.
I Can Afford Food!

            Wow, what a delight to see the menu on the train!  I’m on a train run by Deutsche Bahn, and I can’t believe that, even on the ostensibly overpriced train café, prices look normal to me, like something I would spend back home instead of double (or in the case of Norwegian trains, triple)!  I wanted to order one of everything on the menu, even though that would have left me with about a dozen hot dogs and other wiener dishes, some other silly stuff, and a little chili.  I ordered none because I brought my expensive Swedish lunch already, but I did begin rubbing my hands in anticipation. 
            Also, curiously, in Scandinavia I couldn’t find cream for my coffee (they looked at me funny when once I requested it, and pulled out the can of whipped cream), only milk for my tea; now, on the German train, I can’t get milk for my tea, only cream for my coffee.
I'm tickled by the packaging of milk and sugar on the Swedish train
            Learning about everyday life in other cultures: my second favorite thing about traveling!  First place, I know you might be tempted to ask, goes to seeing all the fresh scenery.

Planes, Trains, and Automobiles . . . With Most On A Boat,

            Having formerly lived on an island with no available land passage, I am no stranger to ferry travel, having taken scores of 2-hour trips (and I mean real ferries, not the little 3-car, 5-minute deal on the island I currently live on).  And you know that I’ve also racked up some rail time.  Today, I combined the two!  How novel that the train ride from Denmark to Germany (the third of four countries I will visit today) actually involves riding the train onto the ferry!  Isn’t that adorable?  Something about it just tickles me.  It’s like watching a cat catch a ride on a bear.  Unless you have a better simile.


The other ferry is sizeable.  Notice us towering above it

The ferry inside was fairly large and luxurious


This is funny.  The first public transportation I've seen selling Jager shots.  Those Germans.

It was so weird being on the North Sea (ish) seeing a ship with this flag, and not manning battle stations.
            Especially gratifying was remembering my father-in-law, Han, telling me that he and Marion (Alissa’s mom) took the same train/ferry combo back in the 60’s when they vacationed in Norway (Marion’s ancestors’ land) and Holland (Han’s homeland).  I’ll also be riding the train through Han’s hometown, Hengelo.  How cool is that? I may be alone on this trip, but I feel like I’m sharing it with family.  




Deutschland

            I don’t expect to see much of Germany on this trip, only in passing on the train.  So far it looks like a flatter version of Denmark, which looks like a flatter version of Sweden, which looks like a much flatter version of Norway.  The funny thing is, I think my next country, Holland / The Netherlands (would somebody please pick one? And why, with two perfectly good names from which to choose a nationality, are they called “Dutch”?  And why does Germany, when spoken in German, sound like “Dutchland”?) is legitimately the flattest of them all.  But will it look like a flatter version of Germany?  That is the question.
German landfall

Flatness. 
            Changing the subject now, I must admit that after getting quite accustomed to hearing the beautiful sounds of Norwegian for so long, and then the very similar Swedish tongue, I am disappointed that now everyone around me is speaking German.  It’s really not in the same league of beauty and mellifluity (I’m pretty sure that’s a word, even though Microsoft Word disagrees with me.  “Superfluous” the adjective becomes “superfluity” the noun, so “mellifluous” really should become “mellifluity,” no?).

Oh, And While We’re On the Subject of Languages

            Have you heard it said that Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes can all understand each others’ languages pretty well, because they are similar?  I have heard that a few times and could never picture what it must be like, as I have no point of reference, speaking only English and a smattering of French.  After enjoying learning a bunch of Norwegian, however, I found that Swedish and Danish really are fairly compatible!  Pretty much everything is spelled differently, but often by only a little (e.g. “takk” – thanks – in Norwegian becomes “tack” in Swedish, and the Norwegian article “en” becomes “ett”, among other things).  I found myself able to read Swedish signs about 80% as well as I could read Norwegian signs, and the same with menus, newspaper headlines, and the like.  I have definitely never experienced anything quite like it, and it is really a neat thing!
            Tiny, tiny piece of trivia for you: The Swedish Ö is the same sound as the Norwegian Ø, and replaces it in words that are similarly constructed.  For the adventurous, it’s not an English vowel sound, but you can closely reproduce it by pursing your lips in an O shape, as if you were going to say the “oooh” sound from “two”, but then trying to produce an “ee” sound like from “three”.  Isn’t that a cøøl vowel?

The Other Country People Think of when they hear Scandianavia

Although there are actually 4 or more countries (depending on how you look at it) in Scandinavia, I think it's fair to say that people usually think of Norway and Sweden when they hear the word.  Now I've seen a little of both

So long, Rutabagas

            Did you know that the English call Rutabagas “Swedes”?  It’s because back in the day, when many Swedes were very poor, they ate rutabagas all the time.  I may have my facts off just a tiny bit, but trust me, it’s based on a true story.
            If my whirlwind tour may be likened to a tornado, I touched down briefly in Sweden, but thankfully I did no damage.  My fellow hostel-goers managed to damage my sleep quite effectively, however.  I think I finally figured out why they used to call them “youth hostels, “ because I am definitely getting too old for this nonsense.
            Stockholm is certainly an impressive city.  It is a fine example of a capitol city whose countrymen can be proud of it.  But it’s no Oslo.  Oslo is lovely, large (ish), beautiful, friendly, laid back, and, in many ways, it feels unspoiled.  Stockholm is “fine”, but not lovely.  It’s definitely large, but only arguably beautiful.  It’s beautiful compared to your average American city, and it looks suitably European and impressive, but it also feels like it has as much concrete as an American city.  It’s certainly not friendly (I tried several times to strike up conversations with people sitting near me at cafés: in Oslo, they would have been delighted to chat and would have been genuinely interested in why I was in Norway; in Stockholm, they barely acknowledged my greeting and promptly resumed ignoring me).  Stockholm also has a more uppity feel to it, and I just got the impression that the city was full of itself.  If one were to point out a flaw with Oslo, the locals there would probably apologize and say that they’re working on it.  In Stockholm, I get the impression, they would refuse to admit that there was anything wrong with how they do things.
            Of course, this could all be in my head.  Maybe I’m the one with the problem.  I mean, I did only spend a day and a half in Stockholm.  Regardless, I’m very happy to have compared the two most Scandinavian of the Scandinavian countries and to have gotten a bit of a feeling for both.  I still miss Norway, but I will never miss Sweden.  Sorry, Rutabagas.

The Stockholm look.  See? European but not amazing.



Grand, yes.  Quaint?

Stockholm does have a rather lovely harbor.  Especially because it's a city built on islands :)










I do love a nice lively sidewalk restaurant / cafe


          
All Different Shapes and Sizes

            People come in all different shapes and sizes, they say.  Colors, too, I suppose (colorful aside: this reminds me of one of my favorite things ever said by a 7-year-old boy: referring to his Caucasian race, he said, “Why do they call us white?  We’re more pinkish, really . . .” !!).  So back to my fascination with sociology, physical anthropology and human body architecture, here are a few differences between Swedes and Norwegians.  Warning, I do enjoy geeking out on this stuff, so you can skip it and not miss much :)
            For starters, Swedes have much more prominent facial bones.  Their faces are generally wider, and their cheekbones are truly unmatched in their prominence.  The jaws are also squarer, looking a little more German-esque.  I saw a little more dark hair than in Norway, but at the same time the blonds were blonder.  The eyes were similarly blue, but seemed smaller and less round (many of the Norwegians I saw had big round eyes, almost like in a Disney cartoon, which made their blue eyes really jump out at you, like even from across the street). In sum, the Norwegians have more classically beautiful faces (yes I have studied this stuff, I’m not just making it up) but the Swedes’ bone structure gives them a more striking appearance, which is beautiful in its own way. 
            Unlike the Norwegians I’ve seen, there actually were quite a few folks of slight build walking around in Stockholm, and folks seemed ever so slightly shorter than the Norwegians.  They dressed about the same, but a greater proportion of men wore neckties.  Finally, those in Stockholm looked fitter than in Oslo, and they packed around fewer extra pounds.  I don’t know how much of the last two points can be attributed to Stockholm’s larger size and greater “urban” feel, but I’d certainly be curious to find out.  My inbox is open if you have anything to add :)