Amsterdam

I Amsterdam Day Two

Mcdonald's Amsterdam

Day 2 of our I Amsterdam tourist binge was all about canal houses and museums. We spent all day out and about, and had a great time visiting some really cool places – sweet!

Today we started out on the right foot with a trip to McDonalds.  In my experience, it is actually pretty hard to find decent lunch food in Amsterdam that doesn’t involve fighting for a table and sitting there for 2 hours.  We wanted something cheap and fast, and the Golden Arches were there to deliver!

Yay for fountain drinks

Our first stop was the Van Loon Museum.  This place is a very well preserved and restored 17th century canal house that still belongs to an old, wealthy merchant family.  Noelle and I love visiting old houses like this. They offer a really cool glimpse into what life was like way back when (albeit a very rich and aristocratic life!) These big merchant houses were all set up in a similar layout; grand entryway, big curving staircases, lots of rooms upstairs, kitchen in the basement, and a beautiful garden leading to the carriage house.  Van Loon has all of that on display!

Cool clock

Van Loon fireplace

Van Loon kitchen

Van Loon garden

We also visited the Geelvink Hinlopen House, and the Willet House.  Both had more beautiful gardens, and some cool rooms to explore.  I would vote Van Loon as the best of the three, but with the I Amsterdam card, we were just glad to see all of them without paying for each entrance.

Dining Hall

Walking along

Noelle took some cool panoramas with her iPhone too:

Van Loon Room Pano sm

Van Loon Room2 Pano

Van Loon Room3 Pano

Willet Room Pano

Also on the list was the Tassenmuseum Hendrikje (Museum of Bags and Purses).  I suppose it is a little odd that I can be extremely interested in the inner workings of an old, greasy VW engine one week, and then find myself still mildly amused by the progression of styles and materials used in 17th and 18th century fashion… I suppose I should find it even more odd that Noelle is also extremely interested in the purses, but also mildly amused by the VW engine.  We’re just crazy I guess!

Purses

After an enthralling morning walking around the houses and museums, we found ourselves in the middle of yet another open air market, this time in Waterlooplein.  These markets are cool, but after almost two months of Amsterdam living, I’m starting to feel the pull of a well stocked Target.

Waterlooplein market

We hit up Rembrandt’s house for our final museum stop before heading to dinner.  This was essentially another house museum, that also included some works from the artist. They also had a decent workshop demonstration set-up. The place was a little more crowed than the other stops, and we were definitely losing steam by this point.  We decided to head to Leidseplein to find some grub!

Rembrandt's house

Workshop

First we stopped in at the Pipe Museum outside of the square. I was expecting the museum to be some hokey little place with a bunch of your typical Amsterdam = weed type stuff, but it turned out to be a huge collection of smoking pipes dating from way back b.c. to today. It was interesting to see the change in materials and styles, and our guide was very keen to make sure we saw each and every one!

Pipe Museum

After getting a thorough education on tobacco smoking through the ages, we ended up back at De Zotte, the brown cafe we ate at a few weeks ago.

A couple hours of drinking 8% alcohol beers, eating large amounts of bread, cheese, fries, and spare ribs, we headed off to the Van Gogh museum. It’s open until 10 on Fridays; we had tried to go earlier in our trip, but found the line was too long. This time there was almost no line, and the entrance free was covered with the I Amsterdam card – sweet!

Van Gogh disco

After wandering the floors of the museum and taking in the many colorful paintings, we were just about totally exhausted. A quick tram ride back to the Jordaan and we were off to bed.  Hopefully we will have enough energy for Day 3!

Amsterdam

I Amsterdam Day One

Beautiful Bridge

Our time in Amsterdam is quickly winding down.  We came here to test and develop our plan to travel-work, and I feel like we have done a pretty good job balancing those two competing priorities.  But… wouldn’t it be awesome to tip that scale over to the travel side with some last minute, aggressive, push like it’s Disney World type of touristing? Answer: heck yeah!

So, we each bought a 72hour I Amsterdam card, and proceeded to get our tourist on.  This card covers a majority of the many sites and museums that Amsterdam has to offer, as well as unlimited GVB tram travel.  They include a number of sites in the outlying areas, and throw in an hour long canal cruise to top everything off – Sweet!

Tropenmuseum

For day 1 we got a fairly early start taking the #14 tram to the Museum of the Tropics.  This place is interesting to say the least.  The guidebook said “Stories, splendid works of art and objects bring a variety of cultures to life.”  What we found was a pretty odd and eclectic mix of stuff. They have everything ranging from 1600’s era Caribbean and African items that the Dutch have relocated (read plundered), to some kids toys from the 1980’s and 1990’s, to some Teletubbies riding a zebra chariot.  Noelle tried to argue before we got there that this was going to be a bit of a roadside attraction. I didn’t believe her, but the pictures prove it… I was wrong!

Tropics Museum Day 1 Totem Raise the roof Sweet Phone Terrifying And there's this Also Terrifying

After leaving the Tropenmuseum behind, we grabbed a quick toastie and a Coke Light, and headed to the Zoo!  The Artis as it’s called is a Victorian era park and zoo that spans a big chunk of real estate in the Plantage neighborhood of south-east Amsterdam.  This place houses a pretty random bunch of animals and birds, and has that old-school, look at the pretty monkey through the bars, type of a feel which was fun for me; mostly because I’m not behind the bars (at least that’s what they tell me).

Camel Eye on Artis Behind Bars

The weather was actually really beautiful, and had a kind of spring-like quality in the air.  I think the animals could feel it too.  From the lions to the lizards to the little fat mouse things – they all seemed… twitterpated… Lions Giraffe Birds Lizards Beavers

This dude is just so chill:

He is so chill

On a side note, they wanted 2euro for a park map.  I of course immediately declined before I heard that the money went to some save the elephants fund… oops. Noelle still feels guilty. Aquarium

After several hours at the zoo we strolled over to the Botanical Gardens.  Getting in to these places with just a swipe of the I Amsterdam card was cool.

The gardens are relatively compact; a nice reprieve for our feet.  We saw some cool plants which was fun too. I did notice that they have a very rare and ancient type of tree from the time of the dinosaurs imprisoned on site. I’m not sure what you have to do to get a jail cell like that in Amsterdam of all places!

The Palm House Butterfly Thats a bad tree

They even have a redwood:

They have a Redwood

Once we got our fill of all of nature’s carefully curated beauty, we headed down the street to the old Jewish Quarter.  We spent some time reflecting at the Holocaust museum and memorial, and toured the Portuguese Synagogue.  This was my first experience in a Kippah – not half bad!

Holocaust Memorial Portugese Synagogue Kippah

By this point it was getting into the evening, and we were pretty wiped out.  We managed to make our way over to Rembrandt square and grabbed a decent bite to eat at one of the many restaurants lining the area.

Rembrandt Square

Amsterdam is definitely one of the better places to just sit and people watch – always lively and interesting!  We ended our I Amsterdam binge Day One watching “Gone Girl” at the historic theatre nearby. On to Day Two!

Amsterdam

Amsterdam Travels

RampoortIn the 4 weeks or so that we’ve been in Amsterdam, we’ve been to a bunch of places and seen a lot of cool stuff.  We’ve also spent a lot of time sitting around working in front of our computer screens – I guess trying to make enough passive income to sustain global travel while simultaneously paying someone to patch holes in an old VW bus takes a lot of work… who knew!

In the midst of this week’s lack of real “travel” experiences, I was feeling overly reflective about what we are doing and where we are headed. If only there was a way to see what the heck I was up to this same time last year

This week last year I finally had the bus running ok enough to drive out onto the neighborhood streets for the first time, only to find out that everything still didn’t work right.  Ha, it makes me smile thinking about how clueless I was!  Another word to use might be naive, but either way I’ve learned a lot in a year. I am also really happy with where we are at!

I like looking at old pictures on the blog, and so in that spirit, I am going to upload a bunch of Amsterdam extras that haven’t made it into a post to-date.  Enjoy!

Plane Food Yumm Centraal Hotdogs Canal Houses Canal Cruise Busy Noordermarkt Mmm cheese HeinyOld ChurchThey gentrified the red lights!Westerkerk pipesRed WallDorkQuiet CanalBeautiful canal parkAnother beautiful day

Amsterdam

Spui Square

Book FairAn outdoor book fair, a hidden courtyard, and a floating flower market – it’s Spui Square!  Noelle and I both got hit with a pretty bad flu bug over the last couple days, but we managed to stay coherent enough to wander around this cool part of the city.

The weather has been absolutely beautiful for the last week or so, and today was no different. Spui square is a fairly short walk away from our apartment in the Jordaan neighborhood, and the route takes you over some of the best canal views in the city!

Canal view4I’ve also spotted some sweet VW’s in the area. Seeing these makes me miss my rotting piece of metal back home just a little bit.Sweet Single Cab Sweet Panel VanOn Fridays, the square hosts an outdoor book market (I guess going to outdoor markets is a thing we do now?)  We didn’t actually buy anything, but it was fun to sit back and watch the bustling activity.  Amsterdam is definitely a city in motion; people riding bikes right and left, cars honking, trams streaking by. We love it, and it’s quite a big change from the automobile gridlock of suburbia Chicago! 1 EuroWe soon found our way into the Begijnhof courtyard.  This hidden quiet space is completely opposite and insulated from the busy Spui square right next door.  This place is actually super old, dates from the 1300’s, and used to house a group of religious women known as beguines.  Today it is a nice, bright courtyard with a couple cool churches and private houses.Begijnhof Courtyard Begijnhof Church Begijnhof Stained GlassWe then wandered back out to Spui, walked down the street a bit, and found ourselves at the Bloemenmarkt.  This floating flower market area was pretty cool.  We wanted to visit this place in anticipation for our soon to be trip to the famed flower auction at Aalsmeer.  Honestly, I was expecting there to be more actual flowers for sale, but most of it was the bulbs or seeds, along with the obligatory wooden shoe or kitchy windmill trinket.  A little too much on the tourist trap side for me!

At this point, the flu symptoms were starting to kick back in, so we headed back to the apartment – hopefully we will be back at it soon with a couple decent trips planned for next week!Bloomenmarkt Lots of flower stuff

 

Amsterdam

Westerkerk

Westerkerk down the street

If you had told me a few months ago that I would enjoy climbing up a narrow brick tower with rickety wooden stairs and ladders, I would have said something like “I know I’m the one with rusty old VW bus… but you’re crazy!”  But sure enough, today we climbed up the Westerkerk bell tower – and it was awesome!

We have been saying that we are going to climb this thing since we got here, but between working and wandering the streets of this crazy city, we just hadn’t gotten around to experiencing Westerkerk.  So today we paid our €7.50 and started our ascent. A long ways up

Westerkerk is the tallest church tower in Amsterdam, and was built by the Protestants in the mid 1600’s.  The church itself has a very stark interior, especially compared to some of the other grand Catholic cathedrals I’ve seen.  The tower contains the famous bells that can be heard ringing various melodies and chimes throughout the day.

Going into the church is free, but they make you pay a little cash and go in a tour group of 6 to climb the tower.  Noelle thought the guide was cute… so that was a good start.  The tour was pretty short and simple – he explained a little history of the tower as we stopped on each floor to rest.  The view from the top was amazing!

View from the tower Top of the tower Sweet bell Mechanicals Climb those stairs!Looking good!

Heading back down those ladders and stairs was a bit of a challenge, but honestly, after 3 weeks of running up and down the 4 flights of stairs at our apartment, we took these in stride – Success!

We also wandered around the inside of the church.  They say Rembrandt is buried somewhere – I didn’t notice at first, but the entire floor of this place is actually just a bunch of stone graves.  I’m sure they don’t mind the hundreds of people tramping over their face all day long!

Westerkerk doorway[photonav url=http://www.day-tripping.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Westerkerk-Panorama.jpg mode=drag popup=none animate=none position=left container_width=900 container_height=295]

So the tower was awesome, the church was cool, and even the area around Westerkerk is nice.  They’ve got a herring stand, a stand selling yummy frites, usually someone out playing some music.  There’s also the ever present line to get into the Anne Frank house stretching around the block (if you can’t tell already, lines are not my thing (except at D-world, the happiest place on Earth.))  A great church in a great neighborhood!

Sweet Frites Stand Beautiful Jordaan

On a side note, Noelle and I celebrated our six year anniversary this weekend – so of course we found the highest rated Mexican restaurant in town and went straight there.  Los Pilones is actually a Mexican restaurant run by Mexican ex-pats, as opposed to a “Mexican” restaurant run by crazy Europeans who think they can cook but they can’t.  It was cool, the cerveza was cold, the margarita’s were tasty, and the fish tacos were awesome!

Yummy! Los Pilones