Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Kinderdijk

Port 1 of the Grand European Tour on the Viking Skirnir, November 2024.
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After boarding the ship in Amsterdam, our first stop was in Kinderdijk in the Netherlands' South Holland province. We learned how the Dutch have been managing the waters that would otherwise flood their low-lying land, and the engineering expertise that they have developed over the centuries. 

The more I learned about clever Dutch engineering, planning, and management, the more my admiration and understanding grew for the Dutch family (VandenBoom) I married into, and for my own Dutch ancestors, the Gibersons/Guibersons. 

Looking up the canal, showing some of the 19 windmills built around 1740.


The job of miller was handed down from father to son (and now to daughters, as well), sometimes over as many as 16 generations. One of the fathers built a small-scale windmill (unfortunately not shown here) for his little son, so that the boy could mimic his father's tasks on the larger mill and thus safely learn his future job.

This photo was meant to show just how tall the windmill stretches up. Inside there were steep stairways (more like ladders) from the kitchen/living room floor, to the one where the parents of the family slept, to the floors with small rooms for the sons and for the daughters of the family. At one time, a family of 14 lived here. 

November 18, 1741: A huge storm caused the catastrophic St. Elizabeth's Flood, which drowned both people and villages. A folk tale grew up over time, telling the story of searchers finding a child floating in a cradle that was kept in balance by a cat that jumping back and forth on the basket to keep it from sinking. This brass monument to the tale is called Beatrice's Cradle, unveiled 600 years after the flood. 

 

A Grand European Tour

Viking Skirnir
from https://www.vikingrivercruises.com/ships/longships/viking-skirnir.html


On November 11, 2024, my friend Florence and I boarded the Viking river ship Skirnir for our Grand European Tour. 

Over the next 18 days, we would visit a village in the southern part of the Netherlands, see many medieval villages in Bavaria, Germany, then travel to Austria and Hungary. We also chose an inland trip extension to Prague in the Czech Republic for an additional three days.

We would travel on the Rhine River, the Main River, through the Main-Danube Canal, and finally on the Danube River. As a friend of mine said, following our journey from back in New Mexico--the ship would go through 67 locks, allowing it to essentially "climb" over a mountain range and down the other side (in a manner of speaking). 

Florence and I have traveled with a group of friends on some big ocean-bound ships that held between 2000 and 4000 passengers. On such ships we would occasionally see a person twice, but never to speak with. The Skirnir, on the other hand, had a total of 180-190 passengers, allowing us to meet a great number of people, especially since the dining room was large enough to hold all of us at once. This was really the best part of the trip for us--getting to know people from all over the United States, Canada, China, and Australia. At a time when our own country is so politically divided it was a relief to be able to chat with people and trade stories that made us all aware of the things we have in common. 

The following blog posts will chronicle our journeys. 

Port 1: Kinderdijk

Port 2: Köln (Cologne)

Port 3: Miltenberg, Lower Franconia, Bavaria

Port 4: Würzburg, Lower Franconia, Bavaria