Ideally, a break should combine some level of discovery, good food that needn’t be a quest, a hotel pleasant for both adults and children, a park, and somewhere to stop for a drink around four o’clock. Not all trips work, especially with mini people. Amsterdam met the magic mark.
On the way we spent one night in Delft, which lends itself well to treading the cobblestones at dusk, along quaint canals lined with glittering merchant houses, in search of dinner.
Then a day in The Hague with a stop at the Peace Palace and lunch in a surfer café on the beach. It was a blustery Sunday and Scheveningen was alive with weekend strollers and kite-surfers.
In Amsterdam, we sped along canals in the morning mist.
We clambered up constricted staircases to an old clandestine church — an intimate museum that conjures one of Amsterdam’s less tolerant chapters.
At the Rijksmuseum we lost track of time amid the lush collections of model boats, intricate arms, gleaming porcelains, and waggish magic lanterns before rushing up to an obligatory feast of Rembrandt, Ruisdael, Vermeer. The museum is gorgeously restored.
And offers a very decent lunch.
We visited the Van Gogh museum, as one must. It doesn’t reveal the artist the way the best museums might (I am thinking in particular of the Museu Picasso in Barcelona). The experience was rather like trudging through a mall during shopping season.
Whizzing around on bikes is the way to see Amsterdam. It is probably safer than risking it on foot — entitled riders are pretty reckless so it’s best to secure similar swerving capabilities. And cycling around with children makes dashing along the canals, from one museum to the next, very fun. No moans, no hint of a complaint.
We rode West to Café Restaurant Amsterdam, the best place to have a drink, read the paper, have a delicious dinner of simple plates (tiny grey shrimp, Dutch herring, mackerel fillets, rillettes, lentil salad with parma ham) with a glass of Sancerre, all in a nineteenth-century Pumping Station. Great food, a casual atmosphere, no pretense. Perfect.
Later we met friends and found the parakeets in Vondelpark.
We spent a morning at the stunning Scheepvartmuseum.
And even managed to steal a visit to Droog. There is a cool sweet shop just across the street to occupy less patient gremlins.
We stopped on a pretty gracht for that four o-clock drink.
And we cycled along the harbor at night.
We had booked the room with the swing.
Magic!
Tags: amsterdam, cafe restaurant amsterdam, holidays, rijksmuseum, travel, vondelpark
8 December 2014 at 14:46 |
it sounds like you just checked all the boxes indeed (and I have been living in a’dam for 16 years now ;) )
it is a lovely place, isn’t it? today it’s been hailing like there’s no tomorrow, though, so you were pretty lucky.
son (aka la ninja)
p.s. where can one find the swing room (just in case visitors with children are interested in it? :)
4 December 2014 at 16:02 |
Thanks for this travel journal. And the room with a swing: the cherry on the cake!