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-   -   Rotterdam for a few days (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/rotterdam-for-a-few-days-1664832/)

menachem Mar 19th, 2019 11:27 AM


Originally Posted by StCirq (Post 16889006)
Well, whatever his language skills may be, if he's Italian he no doubt likes food, so a trip to the Market Hall might work.He also might like the Hard Hat Tours: https://www.derotterdamweekendtours.nl/depot/


More interesting option: Fenix Food Factory in Katendrecht.

PalenQ Mar 19th, 2019 01:15 PM

Antwerp, Belgium is about an hour by high-speed train and a really amazing city - its train station is one of the best in Europe from a grandiose architectural standpoint - one reason locals call it the Cathedral. Most sights are clustered not far from the train station. Lots of trains - some really cheap.

menachem Mar 20th, 2019 07:10 AM


Originally Posted by PalenQ (Post 16890266)
Antwerp, Belgium is about an hour by high-speed train and a really amazing city - its train station is one of the best in Europe from a grandiose architectural standpoint - one reason locals call it the Cathedral. Most sights are clustered not far from the train station. Lots of trains - some really cheap.

Half an hour by Thalys, an hour by "regular" International Intercity service (no reservation necessary)

bvlenci Mar 20th, 2019 07:45 AM

I don't think we'll have time for Antwerp, unfortunately. Three full days is already too little for Rotterdam. I had hoped for four days, but we have constrictions before and after those three days.

bvlenci Mar 21st, 2019 07:24 AM

Menachem, I just saw the Stroopwafels link you posted. When I first read the post I was in a limited reception area and it didn't load.

It brought back memories. In the office where I worked, they had a coffee machine that made really good coffee, each cup individually brewed with a filter. We all used to put a stroopwafel as a lid on the cup, to keep the coffee warm. Then the stroopwafel also got nice and soft from the steam and the honey melted just a little bit...

menachem Mar 21st, 2019 11:12 AM


Originally Posted by bvlenci (Post 16891130)
Menachem, I just saw the Stroopwafels link you posted. When I first read the post I was in a limited reception area and it didn't load.

It brought back memories. In the office where I worked, they had a coffee machine that made really good coffee, each cup individually brewed with a filter. We all used to put a stroopwafel as a lid on the cup, to keep the coffee warm. Then the stroopwafel also got nice and soft from the steam and the honey melted just a little bit...


Yes, 'tis the way of the Stroopwafel. :)

Anyway, visiting Rotterdam as it now is: you'll be amazed.

menachem Mar 21st, 2019 11:19 AM

bvlenci Had to look up Jan ter Laanplaats to see where it is exactly in De Esch, then realized that a couple of years ago we built the Esch communal garden near there. Beautifully grown now, after about 6 years.

Did you ever visit Arboretum Trompenburg when you were there? Or the Slotlaan/Vijverweg Quarter in Kralingen? Can I also suggest you book a place for dinner at In Den Rustwat? https://www.idrw.nl/

bvlenci Mar 21st, 2019 03:07 PM

I hate to say it, but I didn't see much of Rotterdam as a tourist. I began working a few days after I arrived, and I worked in the Hague. It was a fairly long commute. On weekends we tended to visit other towns in the Netherlands, or on long holiday weekends we often went to another country. I had never been in Europe before. I don't know if I saw the Slotlaan/Vijverweg Quarter. I didn't see any Arboretum. We often made repeat visits to places my kids had enjoyed. We all liked Leiden, Gouda, and Haarlem. We went to Utrecht once, and to the Kröller-Müller museum and the surrounding park.

One thing I really enjoyed was the carillon bell concerts. Do they still have those in some towns? Also the steam calliopes. The poffertjes!!

I looked up Jan ter Laanplaats myself a week ago, to see if it was recognizable. The buildings definitely are, but there is a lot more green (trees, mostly) than there was 30 years ago. I did see a garden on the map. When I was there, there was a school (which my children attended), a small convenience store, and a doctor's office in that area. They were still building in the area, and they were extending a tram line. I shared an apartment with another family who had two children around the same age as mine, and they all went to the school together. I chose a Dutch school instead of enrolling them in one of the international schools. In a month, they were both speaking Dutch, and in no time they were fluent, at least at a kid level. Unfortunately, they forgot Dutch pretty quickly after returning to the US, although I think some of it would come back if they spent much time there in the future.

I had very little success in learning Dutch. Our office was an English-speaking international research group. My kids had the advantage that not many kids their own age spoke English yet, but whenever I tried to comunicate with adults in Dutch, they anwered me in English.

menachem Mar 21st, 2019 10:35 PM

Trompenburg and that part of Kralingen are more or less across from where you lived, on the opposite side of Honingerdijk

Slotlaan and Vijverweg:

If you want a tour through Kralingen, send me a PM


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