Welcome

You should probably read the very first entry to grasp the point of this blog.

In a nutshell, I am an aging diabetic striving to accomplish one last grand physical endeavor before time limits my options.
My drive towards the ultra-marathon was tied to raising funds for Juvenile Diabetes Research, but it has been closed. I still encourage you to visit the JDRF web site and make a pledge --> http://www.jdrf.org/

Friday, March 4, 2011

Dutch Treat VI: A Dam Good Day

Wednesday June 3rd, 2009.  Damn the strippenkaart, damn the train schedule and damn the buses, for today we were tackling Amsterdam on foot (damn it!).  We would steer towards the Jordaan neighborhood first to reach the Anne Frank House before lines got too long.  Afterwards, Kim had a couple shops she wanted to check out, so for the most part it was to be a day of strolling the Dam.

Treading through Amsterdam in the morning is a delight…so long as you don’t tread on a bike path!  The multitude of canals lend an aura that makes it difficult to realize you are in a city, but pedal and pedestrian traffic can bring you back to reality in an instant.  The biggest difficulty for us was purely that it is so unexpected to have hordes of bicycles whizzing about.  The bike paths aren’t consistently, conspicuously marked (e.g., I would have benefited if they were always outlined by yellow lines or something).  In addition, pedestrian paths seemed to be the ones that always got shortchanged – no merchant would dare set up a table in the bike path, but they would overflow their store front right up to the bike path!

The biggest thing I had to get used to was that bikes are silent stalkers…you can’t hear them and need to train yourself to always be on alert.  Especially at intersections, where an overtaking biker may need to turn across your path.  Not to make anyone paranoid, we adored walking about Amsterdam, just a heads up if you’ve never had to deal with this situation before.

So long as you are not getting run down, it is invigorating to walk in Amsterdam.  The motion of so many people in business suits, the elderly, the very young and everything in between getting around on two wheels is quite inspiring!  Against this hustling backdrop we made our way towards the Jordaan Thursday morning.  There was another restaurant, the Pancake Bakery, Kim had read about on Prinsengracht (same street as Anne Frank House), which we thought would be a good breakfast option before touring the museum.

It took us about an hour to reach the Anne Frank House and there was a line, but not too bad and we continued on several more blocks to the Pancake Bakery.  It was 10AM, but the Pancake Bakery was closed…they didn’t open until 11AM.  Today’s lesson would be that pancakes aren’t just for breakfast anymore.  So we flipped back around to discover our fifteen minute detour allowed the line to increase significantly.

Due to an exceptional lay out, however, the line moves quickly at the Anne Frank House.  The numerous visitors snake through many rooms and narrow hallways populated with displays (either mementos or artifacts with brief written documentation) and monitors with looping programs that were never more than two minutes long.  This arrangement keeps things in motion and comfortably moves the crowd along without feeling rushed.

The Anne Frank House is a somber experience.  Unlike her diary, the memorial seeps the tragedy of the holocaust into your bones.  There were two things which really struck me.  First was how the windows in the hiding place are still blacked out.  As incredibly sad as it must have been to exist in a few rooms without ever leaving for several years, enduring such a trauma without sunlight is utterly tragic.  Anne’s bedroom still has the pictures she glued on her wall to “brighten things up” and they posted an excerpt from her diary which was the other thing that gripped me.  In the quote Anne expresses her longing to move around outside, enjoy the sun and smells and to feel young again.  This from a fifteen year old…

There was one bright spot – they had a toilet.  I remembered wondering how they disposed of waste and could only imagine they used bedpans which were emptied at night.  There is no mention of this in the diary and I assumed the move to the hiding place happened too quickly to have such a facility installed.

Once you’ve squeezed back out of the hiding place and beyond some further displays there is a mini theater area where short video clips play, posing provocative questions around tolerance (e.g., “should neo-Nazi’s be allowed to demonstrate in front of synagogues?”).  Every seat has a yes/no button and they present the results of the immediate poll for your room as well as the cumulative voting after each question.  The gift shop comes next and was a bit disappointing after everything before it.  There wasn’t much here except for copies of Anne’s diary in every language imaginable.  After all the effort to stimulate feelings around respecting others, this should have been an opportunity to exhibit other books pursuing this important topic.

Kim and I departed, sad, but simultaneously gladdened by this legacy which attempts to keep fresh the perils of narrow thinking.


Now the Pancake Bakery was open, so we rebounded back down the street.  Dutch pancakes (pannenkoeken) are not American pancakes. They are more like pizzas with a delicate crust (like a crepe) and the Pancake Bakery lavishes a lot of winning combinations to top things off. I ordered their Chilean Pancake - one of many on their long list of “International” pancakes – chili, beef, mushrooms, onions, spices, mmmmmmmm! Kim’s pancake came with tomatoes, onions, mushrooms and cheese and she seemed to enjoy hers just as much. The only part I didn’t get was the syrup and vat of molasses on the table à I wouldn’t be inclined to dump sticky stuff on a pizza even if I could.


Now that’s a pancake!

The rest of the day was invested in tracking down a few shops Kim wanted to check out, which helped us check off most of the souvenirs we needed to pick up for family and friends.  It also allowed us to deepen our understanding of the streets of Amsterdam as we ventured all over.  Kim’s office started a fitness program last week so she packed along a pedometer, which indicated we had plodded around eleven miles today.

We wanted to walk through the Museumplein (where the Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museums are) on the way home, and arrived around 5PM, too late to check any museums out.  All that walking had us hungry though and we saw an Indonesian Restaurant, Sama Sebo which lured us into an encore of last night’s fare.  Another terrific rijsttafel, though the similarity to Jacomien’s preparation helped us appreciate just how authentically she prepares this ethnic dish.  Kim and I agreed that Jacomien’s version was tastier!  …and a lot less expensive, lol.

Back at CitizenM, I sent an e-mail to another Dutch friend, Agnes, who we hoped to meet tomorrow.  Agnes’ beautiful pictures of Kinderdijk had enticed Kim and I to visit there and I promised to try and get together for coffee when we headed her way.  Unfortunately, our open itinerary didn’t permit much advance notice (we didn’t plan anything specific in advance so we could pick and choose depending on the weather forecast for the next day).  Although Agnes would be unable to meet us, it was a good thing I had shared our planned approach to Kinderdijk to provide her with options of where to rendezvous.

Our intended route was to take the train to Rotterdam-Lombardijen and catch an hourly bus to Kinderdijk.  Agnes informed us the bus route no longer ran and suggested taking a ferry we could catch a little ways from Rotterdam-Centraal.  Friends came to the rescue once more!

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