Holland is flat!
OK, so there are some things about Holland which you know before you arrive. Like the stuff about the country being flat, and the dykes and the whole windmill thing. None of which means its not nice to actually go and see these things yourself. I mean, it's one thing to know that large parts of Holland are below sea level, its another thing to be driving around an entire man made province, looking at the dykes that turned it from being a big chunk of sea into a big chunk of land.Tuesday was spent taking our Easy Rent a Car around some of the old fishing villages near Amsterdam, aside from the above mentioned waterworks and flatness I got to see a lot of the old sailboats they use to fish the big lakes that make up so much of Northern Holland, and which eventually turn into the sea after passing through a few locks and dykes. We got back to find our hosts attempting Holland's annual educational challenge, ''Het Groot Dictee'' (spelling?) whereby the entire nation watches TV and attempts to take a dictation class. The aim is to encourage proper use of grammar and spelling, adapt to new words and new ways of doing things. (a few years ago the dutch revised a lot of their grammar) the whole thing is conducted from the Dutch first chamber, equivalent to the House of Lords or the Senate and as well as the nation taking part by TV some celebrities and more formal contestants are inivited in to compete. This year the first ever perfect score among the contestants was achieved. By a Belgian. Apparently the Belgians think it's great fun to outdo the Dutch at their own language.
Yesterday was all about the Kroller Mueller Museum which is one of the most famous art galleries in Holland. The permanent collection included over 50 Van Gogh's, as well as stuff by Mondrian and a fantastic painter called Fernand? Leger who's done some really great stuff. They also had a number of portraits from the sixteenth century which were exceptional for their detail and realism. What little I remember of the history of art suggests that this style both began in Holland and was perfected here.
The museum is set in the middle of a national park and is inaccessible by car, you have to borrow a bicycle to get there, or walk it. (its about 1.5 miles from the nearest car park). Around the museum is a sculpture garden containing more great stuff to look at, although yesterday our stroll around the garden was punctuated by the sound of machine gun fire and the thump of heavy mortars. Turns out the army use the nearby woodland for practice.
We ended the day in Arnhem, which is lovely, and today will head for Delft...