Monday, June 08, 2015
Hello in Dutch! (Here
where we are in Belgium, most everyone speaks English without an accent!)
Last night we again weren’t hungry for dinner, so nothing to
report other than a fairly early night to bed, which was nice.
Up at the usual time this morning, and
breakfast again at 8 a.m.
After that, we
finished our packing, checked out and said goodbye to the lovely couple at
Hotel du Croise and were on our way
about 9 a.m.
The laundry we had checked
out was only a few minutes away, and when we got there, we found that they have
only five working machines, and four of them were taken!
Grabbed the last one and got laundry started,
and sat down to wait.
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Bedford House cemetary
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Only thing left from the chateau is ice cellar & moat!
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(Actually only 27
minutes!)
By the time we were ready for
the dryer (of which they have two) it seemed like the California freeways at
rush hour – people were literally lining up at the door trying to find a free
washer … and one lovely lady apparently picked today to do duvets – she had
literally baskets of them, and kept jamming them in these small washers.
Oh well!
We were done by 10:30 and back on the road.
I can only suggest that if anyone wants to
invest in a golden opportunity, an additional Laundromat in
Marcq would be very popular indeed!
Then out of town and into Belgium in minutes, and heading in
the general direction of
Brugge.
Once again, the signs of WWI are
everywhere.
We passed cemeteries on both
sides of the road, as well as various memorials along the route.
Very, very sobering. As we didn’t want to
arrive too early – check-in was at 2 p.m. -- we took our time.
In fact, R thought it would be fun to have
lunch on the coast, so that’s where we headed.
Well…before we knew it, we were in
Oostend,
and honestly folks?
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Driving next to ocean; note artillery
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More guns pointed toward Britain
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Quite a swirling and windy day!
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That place is
scary!
There is a complete wall of
apartments and condos all along the beach, and we couldn’t find any place to
eat!
When we finally ran out of condos, we
ran into what looks to be a public park that is filled with old (WWII) artillery
cannons and cement bunkers, all along the coastline.
Most unattractive!
So, we decided we might as well head into
Brugge, if we didn’t want to starve!
We were in the outskirts of Brugge about 1:15-ish and I want to sincerely congratulate Robert
for getting us to Hotel Patritius! He was amazing, and how he found it, I’ll
never know. Because of heavy traffic and
parking all around the outskirts of town, we apparently missed the entrance we
should have taken. But that didn’t
matter to him at all, as he very skillfully got us right to the back door of
the hotel! Brugge is an island surrounded by canals – apparently it is known
as the Venice of Belgium, and there
are lots of tiny little streets (lots of one-ways) as well as bridges here and
there. I am hoping that now that we have
found the hotel, we can just leave the car alone tomorrow entirely as there
seems to be lots to do here in town!
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One of the gateways to Old Brugge
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Room 33 in Hotel Patritius
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We checked in, and are in lovely room 33 on the third
floor. It is a very spacious room
(especially after Lille!) with a
window overlooking the lovely garden in the backyard. (Where it would be fun to sit if it wasn’t so
windy outside!) Plenty of room for
suitcases and us, which is a refreshing change.
I got us more or less settled in, while R set up the computer. Great computer signal, which is always
nice. Then out to find someplace for
lunch, as it was just about 1:45 p.m. We
got a map and several suggestions from Elvi, the lovely owner, and headed out.
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| Markt Square in Brugge |
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| Our lovely pub/restaurant! |
We passed one of Elvi’s suggestions on our way to her first
place, but when we got there, found it was closed! So, back to a very crowded Cambrinus, a pub restaurant that carries
over 400 varieties of beer! (And also a
few wines, which is good for me…) It
took them a few minutes to find room for us, but we were eventually seated at a
nice table. The guy right next to us was
just finishing up dinner, and it looked so good that I had to ask what he had
ordered – Carbonade, which is the
Flemish version of Boeuf Bourgignon only made with beer (surprise!) instead of
wine. So, I ordered that, and R ordered
their slices of chicken also done in beer with mushrooms and pearl onions. I had a glass of very good dry red wine, and
R (at my insistence)… had their “flight” of beers to sample. My dish also came with Belgian fries
(apparently it was the Belgians, not the French who invented them in the first
place) with a flavored mayonnaise, which were wonderful!
Wow! Both of our
meals were wonderful – the unfortunate thing being that of course now, we’re
not hungry at all, so won’t be able to try something else wonderful for dinner
tonight! Tomorrow, we say, we will have
both lunch and dinner…we’ll see!
After our late lunch, we walked through the Market square,
which was very crowded, and then, about 3:30 p.m. headed back to the hotel for
naps. Felt SO good! Up again at 6 and figure we’ll go out for a
nice walk as it doesn’t get dark until almost 10:30 p.m.
Tomorrow I plan on hitting the chocolate museum and possibly
the lace and/or diamond museum (do you think they give out samples??) as well
as take a boat ride around the canals, which is a very popular thing to
do. So, more later from beautifull Brugge!
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| R and his flight of beers! |
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| Very suspicious... |
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| R's chicken slices with potatoes |
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| Great pub/restaurant |
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| Markt square |
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| Gotta love those lions! |
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| Lovely town hall; very elaborate! |
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| Me in main Markt square! |
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My Carbonade of beef
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Lots of love,
m
xxx
Ooh! The food looks fabulous and I love the pictures of Market Square! Can't wait for the chocolate and diamonds tomorrow! Really sounds like my kind of place! :-)
ReplyDeleteLove,
Brenda