Berlin was a quick stop overnight to break up the train journey. It is a long way from Amersfoort to Prague, but the trains whistle along and are comfortable and pleasant.
Berlin overnight stop and day's local touring was OK but it wasn't enough to convince to come back. While in Berlin we received an email saying that a planned accommodation in Poland had been cancelled and so this left a sizeable gap in the plans, presenting both a problem to solve and an opportunity. Essentially there were now 8 days gap to plan, bookended by Prague and Warsaw. A much-considered option was to come back to Germany after Prague to see some of the towns in Saxony, doing a bit of a Bach/Luther pilgrimage of sorts. Nice idea but accommodation showed itself very expensive or unavailable, some travel practicalities difficult (e.g. luggage, sickness, fatigue) and so we deferred any decision until our planned five days in Prague showed its colours.
Train trip to Prague supplied one of those little human interaction highlights that are the best parts of all the travel. We had booked two window seats of a 6-person train booth and as we get on we see my seat occupied by an old man, looking very comfortable and cosy. I nobly resisted the temptation of turfing him bodily out of my chair (... cut to picture of the Father Bear and Goldilocks here ...) and waited stealthily for an opportunity to arise where like in Musical Chairs he stands up and I grab it leaving him out and forlorn. He was 90, and travelling alone back to Prague, but was bright and active and so I needed to watch carefully for my seat-changing attack as I'm sure he was on-guard. Well, while I waited ... and waited ... there was a little conversation in the booth. The fun thing was, unlike every other language encounter so far where everyone's knowledge of English exceeds my knowledge of French, Spanish, German, Dutch, Welsh, Cornish, Czech, Polish by a hundred-fold, the old man knew no English. Which matched perfectly my comprehensive knowledge of no Czech! The common language between us then was German, firstly interpreted by another man in the booth who disembarked at Dresden but then it was just he and I, so I prepared to lock horns in my high school German. Telling him that the post office was closed and that I drank lemonade wasn't going to convince of my morally superior right to my window seat (mit Fenster und Tisch) and so we both dug deep and had an infantile exchange of information in German. His, of course, was ten times my knowledge, but it was a lot of fun and I remembered a few words. In the end of it he never stood up from my seat and so I was defeated through his clever defensive strategy and so the game was over, Czech-mate. I marvel at such a man, 90 and travelling merrily. I amused him showing the mobile phone and its ability to look up words and translate them (Google Translate). 90 years old means born in Czechoslovakia in 1927, and seeing 1938's Sudetanland Crisis and German/Polish/Hungarian invasion, Russian liberation and end of war, expulsion of German population, Communism and its repressions, revolution and Russian invasion, Velvet Revolution, EU and modern times. That would have been a fascinating and terrible story to have been able to hear.
Monday, 15 May 2017
Netherlands
Amersfoort was our residence for three nights. Nice little town, not all that far from Amsterdam, so clean and organised and bike-friendly.
We had timed our visit for the King's Day (Koningsdag) on 27th April, and had a great day with Martha's cousin Anke and her family for the local fun in Nijkerk, and with cousin Mirjam joining us at Harderwijk for more in the old town, salt herrings and kibling etc. For the evening we got as far as Martha's auntie's and Uncle's farm near Zwolle for evening meal and wander around to see the horses. All in all a highlight day of our trip.


Amersfoort is a train stop for the long journey to Prague via Berlin ...
We had timed our visit for the King's Day (Koningsdag) on 27th April, and had a great day with Martha's cousin Anke and her family for the local fun in Nijkerk, and with cousin Mirjam joining us at Harderwijk for more in the old town, salt herrings and kibling etc. For the evening we got as far as Martha's auntie's and Uncle's farm near Zwolle for evening meal and wander around to see the horses. All in all a highlight day of our trip.


Amersfoort is a train stop for the long journey to Prague via Berlin ...
Wales, Cornwall and Somerset: Leaving England
On April 25th we flew from Exeter airport to Amsterdam, and so ended our trip to England. It has been a very good and memorable one. Somehow we did as the song suggested and took the weather with us, wherever we went. So, not quite Australian weather but certainly comfortable and rainless skies followed us around.
The weeks leading up to our April 25 flight were filled with visits to friends, relaxing, touring and sight-seeing. We were honoured to have caught up with Daphne and Tommy in Port Talbot near Swansea, where Daphne treated us appropriately like Lord and Lady Muck, feeding us and driving us around. I enjoyed at Swansea Markets an old childhood memory taste treat in the form of cockles. Lots of them available by the shovel full and straight from market to mouth was a joy (not so thinks my travelling companion). An interesting variation on this is cockles and laverbread (a local Welsh delicacy) which I had for breakfast - is tasty and unusual but to be had in small quantities for my taste.
Drives up in the hills were lovely, overlooking the famous coal-mining valleys of old.
From Wales we drove to St Buryan, Cornwall via Broadwell, Gloucester, Trull, Okehampton. A long day driving but one that took us for a precious couple of hours to see Alicia Waitt (Broomfield) in Broadwell and her three lovely little boys. Poor little Oscar was a bit sick and sleepy :(
Gloucester was an efficient visit to ancient town centre, cathedral and a cute Beatrix Potter shop and museum at the site of the famous Tailor of Gloucester and all his helpful mice.
St Buryan, way out west in Cornwall beyond Penzance, was a lovely farm-stay for three nights. Got to wander around some ancient stone circles, dodge our way down the craziest of narrow hedgerow-lined lanes, eat Cornish pasties and clotted cream (not together), and see charming fishing villages on our touring days.
Was wonderful to see Alan and Valerie again and enjoyed our cup of tea with them and talked and talked and saw old photographs of Cornwall days. Port Isaac was fun to stop at on way back to our final days in Taunton. Enjoyed hospitality of Julie and Paul, went to a classical choral concert at St James church, some last catching up with several friends.
Finally with relief returning the hire car without dent but arguably not without Cornish/Somerset hedgerow scratches and the plane leaves with us on it and we bid farewell once again to my homeland.
The weeks leading up to our April 25 flight were filled with visits to friends, relaxing, touring and sight-seeing. We were honoured to have caught up with Daphne and Tommy in Port Talbot near Swansea, where Daphne treated us appropriately like Lord and Lady Muck, feeding us and driving us around. I enjoyed at Swansea Markets an old childhood memory taste treat in the form of cockles. Lots of them available by the shovel full and straight from market to mouth was a joy (not so thinks my travelling companion). An interesting variation on this is cockles and laverbread (a local Welsh delicacy) which I had for breakfast - is tasty and unusual but to be had in small quantities for my taste.
From Wales we drove to St Buryan, Cornwall via Broadwell, Gloucester, Trull, Okehampton. A long day driving but one that took us for a precious couple of hours to see Alicia Waitt (Broomfield) in Broadwell and her three lovely little boys. Poor little Oscar was a bit sick and sleepy :(
Gloucester was an efficient visit to ancient town centre, cathedral and a cute Beatrix Potter shop and museum at the site of the famous Tailor of Gloucester and all his helpful mice.
St Buryan, way out west in Cornwall beyond Penzance, was a lovely farm-stay for three nights. Got to wander around some ancient stone circles, dodge our way down the craziest of narrow hedgerow-lined lanes, eat Cornish pasties and clotted cream (not together), and see charming fishing villages on our touring days.
Was wonderful to see Alan and Valerie again and enjoyed our cup of tea with them and talked and talked and saw old photographs of Cornwall days. Port Isaac was fun to stop at on way back to our final days in Taunton. Enjoyed hospitality of Julie and Paul, went to a classical choral concert at St James church, some last catching up with several friends.
Finally with relief returning the hire car without dent but arguably not without Cornish/Somerset hedgerow scratches and the plane leaves with us on it and we bid farewell once again to my homeland.
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