GOUDA

The weather is still warm and sunny as we cruise to Gouda. In Dordrecht we saw advertising for a Water Festival so as we were going to visit Gouda anyway we have timed our visit for this week.

We were handed a booklet at the lock into the town with a map of places to moor and the price. What a pleasant surprise, the price to moor overnight was 8.80e or for 1 week only 30.20 e with free power so we decided to stay for a week and found a mooring in Katinsingel just around the corner from the shopping street leading into the square. The photo below is of Gouda in the 17th century, you can see by the white cross where we moored on the canal and the one in the square that even in 2010 we could easily find our way around.


It is a lovely city to walk around and has many historical buildings, the longest church in the Netherlands, a beautiful Gothic Town Hall and quaint small streets and canals. Cheese of course is the draw card and the street decorations are rounds of cheese, the lamp posts are adorned with flowers and a crown and the canals are decorated with flowers and cheese.



The cheese market was very different to the one we saw in Alkmaar, not so frantic and no barriers around it. The cheese is unloaded and carried away in carts drawn by black horses, young men unload and load the carts, young women carry the cheeses around for people to have photographs taken with them and the buyer and sellers of the cheese barter in the old traditional hand slap so it is a great performance.

The market takes place in the city square behind the Town Hall and in front of the old Cheese Warehouse.




While we were taking photos of the market I saw these two farmer participants discussing their own cheese for sale on the side, so modern business was taking place also.

The cheese stalls had all sorts of interesting hard cheeses.

During the next few days the town is in festival mode as we wandered through the town square, on different days there was an antique and bricbrac market, a day of clothes and everything market and a day of fresh vegetables, fruit and fish market with everything stalls also. Now I am all marketed out!!

Of course our favourite place was always a café to have a coffee and do some people watching.


It was difficult to take a photo without a stall in front of the town hall which is a lovely building.

Inside the town hall is the Marriage Room where the official marriages take place in a beautiful room with the walls covered in an exquisite tapestry.


And outside the smallest bridal car I have seen.

After the market days volley ball and soccer courts were set up for corporate games in several places around the square.

Wandering around the streets there is always something else that is a little different. In this street there is seating around the trees and the shops put out lovely cushions. How nice it is to have a little rest before spending more money. On one of our walks we came across this little bar, Football Fever is still going strong.

We are still having fun joining in the orange brigade watching the big screens.


While we have been travelling with Diana and Arthur we have all been finetuning things and Arthur has fitted an inverter so they can run a washing machine and the coffee machine. We had a nice time last night when we celebrated the commissioning of the inverter with a dinner and dress up.


Walking around the town we see so many unusual houses.

And probably the most unusual Subway Shop.

Gouda’s St John's Church of is 123 metres long and is the longest church in the Netherlands and famous for its stained glass windows. Many of the windows date from 1555, before 1572 it was a Catholic church and afterwards a Protestant church, the tradition of stained glass windows has carried on with some being added over the next 400 years, now it has about 60% of the stained glass windows seen in the Netherlands.
The windows are enormous with wonderful colours and detail , it is hard to believe they are over 400 years old.




The windows were removed during the 2nd world war in case of damage and a Liberation window added in 1948.


On one of our bike rides we went north of Gouda to the Reeuwijkse Lake and onto the small town of Bodegraven. The lower half of the lake is for boating

and the northern half for canoes, nature areas and the local beach. The temperature was around 30 deg and I don’t think there could have been a person left in Gouda, they were all at the beach. The parking area was full.


Riding towards Bodegraven we passed this house where a business made garden furniture and sculptures. There was every animal you can imagine it looked like a Noahs Ark.

Did you say you would like a cow? What size?


They even had a kangaroo

While on animals, back in Gouda and walking around the canal I saw the Man carrying a Donkey sculpture which is on the canal side. I haven’t found out the story yet, it will give you something to do.

One of our early morning sights was this little chick with its mum sitting on a lily leaf with mum close by.

While we were in Gouda we finally caught up with Phil and Sharlene from British Columbia. I first had contact with them when they read the blog and emailed for some information before buying their boat. Phil is on crutches and they are staying on their boat in Vollenhove. Diana and Arthur met them last year and they came by car from to visit us. It was lovely to catch up at last, thanks for coming guys.

Our last morning and we have a quick walk around town. The square looks quite lonely compared to the last week.

This time we managed to get good photos of the bells and tableau of the granting of city rights in on the side of the town hall.


Now it is time to leave, where we stop next? who knows?.

AARLSMEER - FLOWER MARKET - JUNE 2010

AARLSMEER
Our next destination was Aarlsmeer. I have always wanted to see the Bloemenveiling where flowers are auctioned each day for transport around the world.

The cruise north was interesting as we passed the flower growing areas where you could see hectares of glass houses stretching out from the canal.

We stopped for the night on a side canal, the Aarkanal near the town of Alphen ad Rijn.
It is very good in Holland, the towns do a lot to provide places for holiday cruisers. This sidewall went for couple of kilometres with a bike path alongside, along a small canal to a lake area. Some parts of it also ran alongside larger open areas of trees and grass but one had to fight the every year cruisers to get these places.

We also passed under some interesting bridges which lifted up for us to go under or turned to go through.
The next one was interesting for us as we didn’t read the chart properly and had to wait as it only opened each half hour as it was on a very busy road. It may be a nuisance for us but we are only on holiday, it must be a real nuisance for the car drivers if they are running late for work and they get there at the wrong time.


The town of Aarlsmeer is situated at the north edge of the Westeinderplassen, a huge lake which has many small islands and about 35 marinas, boat clubs and boat yards. We cruised through the widest part of the lake then wound our way through a channel to come out right near our destination.

We chose the Nieuw Meer Marina as it was in town and suited us as we needed to be at the flower auction at 7am. We were on the town side and to get to the club across the small channel.
There was a cute little (thank goodness it was small) chain drive ferry which you had to wind vigorously. Sailors in this club must be very good arm wrestlers.


Our bike rides around towns are always interesting.
A new baby girl here.


Someone in these houses has just finished their school years as it is tradition to hang up your school bag on the flag pole.



This little canal has an interesting piece of art, I think it was modelled from one of my summer photographs.

The sky trails above us show how close we are to Schipol Airport.
The road system here in town shows how bicycles are the ruler of cars. The road has a bicycle lane each side with a single car lane in the centre. Bicycles have right of way and cars must wait behind until it is clear to move to the bicycle lane the other side and pass. If the other bicycle lane is occupied the cars and buses must wait behind.

A lot of market research must have been done to show having a coffee and the aroma of coffee relaxes customers and they buy more goods, when we visited the hardware shop they also had table and chairs and free coffee. There isn’t room in this supermarket so they have a small seat near the free coffee machine. If you don’t have time to sit the trolleys are equipped with a coffee cup holder.

FLORA HOLLAND
We were up at 6am next morning to ride out to the flower auction. What a morning we had!!!
The auctions are held on premises which cover the area of 250 soccer fields.

We paid our 5 euro and entered a bees’ paradise. 48 million flowers and plants are auctioned here daily then sent off all over the world.

We see the first of the flowers on trolleys waiting to be taken into the auction rooms.
The visitors walk along a walkway which runs the length of each side of the halls.

There are 6 auction rooms in this hall. The flowers are wheeled in for inspection and all relevant details are put up on the auction board.

The auction rooms had two or 3 screens working simultaneously keeping the buyers on their toes.
As the price drops on the computerised auction board the buyer presses a button on his desk for the containers he is bidding for. You can see the man at the front right with his finger on the button.

Some of the buyers were high tech working with laptops.
Buyer 1014 has just paid 22 cents a stem for these flowers you can just see the red ball at 22 on the screen.



For anyone interested below is the chart given to us to explain the auction screen. AA is the top quality grower.


The frenzy of activity is everywhere with little red electric cars racing around like bumber cars at the showground.

???????

There are patches of bright colour everywhere.



Thousands of the same shade of roses. Did you say you wanted orange ones!!



Soon the flowers are being packed away ready for delivery and it is time to go home.