Skip Amsterdam?
#24

Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 19,755
Likes: 0
OK - This is how it will work. Coffeeshops will become clubs. They will be limited to 2000 members, who will be issued with a pass. Those members must be legally resident in the Netherlands and over the age of 18. Those members will be allowed to buy no more than 5g a day. By the end of this year all coffeeshops must work this way.
The Mayor of Amsterdam is still opposed to the system and is trying to get an exception for the city, but that is extremely unlikely.
Sadly those rule will result in a huge step back to illegal selling of marijuana and I fear a consequential increase in users of other, harder drugs.
I can see the point of clubs for the towns and cities near the Belgian border, but for those further away it seems a retrograde step.
The Mayor of Amsterdam is still opposed to the system and is trying to get an exception for the city, but that is extremely unlikely.
Sadly those rule will result in a huge step back to illegal selling of marijuana and I fear a consequential increase in users of other, harder drugs.
I can see the point of clubs for the towns and cities near the Belgian border, but for those further away it seems a retrograde step.
#26

Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 19,755
Likes: 0
There has been a huge problem with drug tourists - mostly from Belgium and France, in the border towns and cities. At the weekend they would be full of these tourists causing a lot of problems. Also these tourists would naturally enough think they could take a stash back with them in their cars/buses/trains. Many of them drove high and were a real problem on the roads. Those on the trains were also causing massive problems.
Pressure has been applied by other European countries, but also by the towns and cities suffering this constant hassle. Many places closed the coffeeshops in their town - this just resulted into the problem moving further into the country.
So the government, in it's wisdom, decided to take a sledge hammer to crack a nut.
Pressure has been applied by other European countries, but also by the towns and cities suffering this constant hassle. Many places closed the coffeeshops in their town - this just resulted into the problem moving further into the country.
So the government, in it's wisdom, decided to take a sledge hammer to crack a nut.
#32
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 98,229
Likes: 12
Back to the original question... I think 4 cities is tight in your timeframe. And it seems like Munich is the one "must do". Honestly I'd skip either London, Paris or Amsterdam, your pick. but 2-3 cities is plenty for 12 days!
#36
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 78,320
Likes: 0
Munich IMO makes a great base for several days as some astounding places are within an hour or two of it - like Fuessen and Mad Ludqig's Neuschwanstein Castle, Salzburg, Austria, Herrenchiemsee Castle, Mad Ludwig's Bavarian Versailles and even Dachau just for starters. The city to me also has never really struck me as romantic - a nice modern city with wide streets and great museums but not the dreamy look of an Amsterdam or Paris, etc.





