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The Netherlands - What are your Top 5 Must See or Must Dos?

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The Netherlands - What are your Top 5 Must See or Must Dos?

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Old May 23rd, 2011, 03:48 AM
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The Netherlands - What are your Top 5 Must See or Must Dos?

We will have 5 full days in the Netherlands. We'll spend each night in Amsterdam, but are open to day trips. No matter where in the country, what are your very very favorite things to see or do in Netherlands?

We are a famiy of 5 - "kids" ages 20, 18 and 15. The kids like museums well enough, but we'll need to iimit them to the best of the best.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 04:48 AM
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My must sees and do would probably not be of interest however I would highly recommend a day out in the Hoge Veluwe National Park. You can use the free white bikes to get around, or reserve blue ones if you want to be sure to keep the same bike - visit the Kroller Muller museum, ride through the park, maybe take a picknick with you.

You mentioned wanting to visit Makkum. In that case I'd suggest hiring a car for the day, and driving there, much easier than by public transport. Visit Hindelopen too and maybe Sneek or carry on up and visit harlingen and/or Franeker as well. Harlingen is a lovely old port and Franeker is a lovely old town, and has a wooden planetarium which is worth visiting. Harlingen has some good restaurants and cafes - so you could have your evening meal there before heading back to Amsterdam.
If you go up through Flevoland and back over the Afsluitdijk (which is worth seeing in it's own right) you will have done a sort of circle of the Ijsselmeer
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 05:41 AM
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I suggest Madurodam in the Hague. Then go up to Duinrell in Wassenaar. Those are two places that you and the kids would probably enjoy.

A visit to Haarlem is also interesting. It is only 20 minutes by train from Amsterdam's Centraal Station. Haarlem is more traditional and much less hectic than Amsterdam.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 06:16 AM
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That's funny hetismij.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 06:47 AM
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I'm with hetismij and visit the Hoge Veluwe. Yoiiu could visit Appledorn but have a look at the research before you jump here.

Bike riding is a must, take a train and cycle round the Ijsselmeer.

Did anyone mention applecake
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 07:43 AM
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Leiden is a lovely small city with beautiful canals. The history of the Pilgrims ten years there before they left for N. America on the Mayflower includes a museum.
It's an easy train ride from Amsterdam.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 08:55 AM
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Thanks. Interesting that no one has recommended a single art museum!
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 08:59 AM
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Hi, missypie. I haven't seen your posts for a long time! Here are my notes from our family visit to Amsterdam, with our older teens:

"Final stop: Amsterdam. Five nights’ stay, first visit for all of us.

LOVED, LOVED, LOVED Amsterdam! You always hear of the Red Light district and the coffee shops and the laissez-faire attitude, but you don’t hear how open and friendly the people are, how lovely the canals and side streets, how wonderfully trendy the restaurants and cafes, how people are out strolling at all hours of the night and you feel safe everywhere. I think I’d expected it to be quaint and charming (which it is), but in a dark wood-paneled cliché way, not in the young and contemporary way it is.

The standard reply we were given in Amsterdam, when we asked for anything, was always “Of course!” How refreshing.

We stayed in a fabulous location, at The Hotel Residence le Coin, which was directly across a small street from the Hotel de l’Europe, down the street from the Hotel Doelan, on Nieuwe Doelenstraat (sp?). A great neighborhood in the heart of old Amsterdam.

The hotel has a lift and A/C, also free use of the hotel’s washing machine and clothes dryer in the basement (which was welcome as we’d been traveling over a week when we arrived there). Each room has a little kitchenette, a nice-sized bath, large rooms with wooden floors and a sitting area. It’s fairly new, so everything sparkles. Very friendly front desk, too.

Two cafes on the same block as the hotel were wonderful: Café Katoen for a university atmosphere, and Café le Jarden, for great table seating on the canal.

Amazing dinners at two restaurants in particular:
“Stout!”, at Haarlemmerstraat 73 (www.restaurantstout.nl). Fabulous ‘foamy asparagus’ soup with shrimp, chateaubriande, fresh fish, dessert course, wine list. Very trendy lighting. Great service. We’d gone to the neighborhood in search of a restaurant called “Lof” which we’d seen written up. We didn’t like its atmosphere, but were lucky that Stout! was just across the street.

Also at “Restaurant Dining Eleven” we had a great dinner. It’s at Reestraat 11. Also trendy and contempory, well-presented and beautifully-served meal.

Another nice dinner at “frenzi”, at Swanenburgwal 232. Very simple and contemporary. We arrived shortly after 10:00p.m., when most restaurants close in Amsterdam, and persuaded the owner to sell us any left-overs they had in the kitchen! They put together a nice Caesar salad with cooked-in-the-shell shrimp and mango. Very nice.

Also a good brunch at a place across the street from frenzi—called “Puccini”. Creative salads and sandwiches. Very nice also.

We took a canal cruise one evening. Toured the Anne Frank Huis and the Van Gogh Museum. Visited the Nieuwe Kerk (sp?) Our teens went to a concert at the Paradiso and loved it.

One afternoon we did the 2:30 “Best of Holland” excursion to Volendam and Marken, with a stop to see wooden clogs made, Gouda cheese created, and to visit windmills. It was by bus, with a boat from Volendam to Marken. A lot of fun. Even our two teens liked it.

Our teens also liked shopping at one street in particular, between our hotel and the museum district. Also a Zara shop there, and many others like it. They thought the selection and prices were better in Amsterdam than what they’d seen in London and Paris even.

A detail about Amsterdam if you go there-- carry enough Euros in cash, because many places won't accept a credit card for a 'small' purchase (i.e. under 25 EU)."
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 09:28 AM
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If you go the Hague then can I suggest the Mauritshuis, and Panorama Mesdag as well.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 09:37 AM
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I like the Van Gogh museum. It is not too small yet not so large that I get bored or just ready to get outside. And I have been to the Anne Frank Museum twice. Very interesting. It was great to actually see the things I have read about.

As a day trip, I absolutely love Delft! I usually stay there and visit Amsterdam
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 10:07 AM
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Anne Frank house...absolutely no doubt. They should read the book before if they haven't already.

Zaanse Schans for the up close windmill experience. We were adults and loved it and learned a lot there. Plus they have shops throughout with clogmaking, cheesemaking, etc. Sort of touristy but I'd think great for that age.

We did not enjoy Haarlem and wouldn't go back, but I've heard it was not "normal" when we were there. There was a big carnival in the square that was taking over the town and not something we were interested in.

If you get the kids into the Rijksmuseum and see Rembrandt's Night Watch, you can see it in 3-D glory in Rembrandplein, an open air square with life-size replicas. That was pretty cool.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 10:31 AM
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I like to have a few drinks and go to FEBO for a late snack.

http://www.febodelekkerste.nl/
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 01:27 PM
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missie, just to be clear the Kröller-Müller Museum is in the Hoge Veluwe.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 01:41 PM
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In Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, Ann Frank House, maybe a canal boat ride, and Dutch resistance Museum is very moving. The Kroller-Muller Museum is very nice, but can be long and difficult to get to. They do have free bikes you can ride through the park setting. Leiden is a delightful little city - we actually stayed there and took day trips. Delft looks like it would be a pretty little town, but it was cold and raining the day we were there and not much was open. The summer might be lovely.
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 01:43 PM
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<i>travelgourmet on May 23, 11 at 1:31pm
I like to have a few drinks and go to FEBO for a late snack.</i>

To put this into perspective regarding the other thread on what to wear to a nice restaurant, why am I not surprised that Mr. Jeans-and-T would go to a food automat for a greasy Indonesian egg roll? Maybe FEBO defines nice restaurant for TG?
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Old May 23rd, 2011, 01:46 PM
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I think the Kroller Muller is a splendid idea and it is one of my favorite museum memories.

I'm not sure, though, that it's a great idea for a person who may have done no other research besides asking on a message board what they should do. misspie did say that her children, "like museums well enough."
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Old May 24th, 2011, 04:19 AM
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I've done research. If you look back a few years, you'll see that I do a LOT of research for our trips. It's just that from what I've read, the Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum and Ann Frank House all stand out...then there seems to be "everything else."

I typically love the Eyewitness Guides, but the one for the Netherlands makes everything but Amsterdam look about the same. Lovely and charming, but about the same. Haarlem, Delft and The Hague each get a couple of pages in the books. So do lots of other towns. It's difficult to determine the "best of the best."

We don't want a trip that consists of two museums every day (okay, I would love that but the kids would revolt), nor do we want a trip of wandering around a different charming small town every day.

I am picking up some tips on "experiences" - biking around somewhere (several good ideas), a canal boat cruise. This half of the trip can be heavy on "attractions" if need be, because the second half will be the Bernese Oberland, which will be all "experiences" rather than "attractions."
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Old May 24th, 2011, 04:46 AM
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Re: the Kroller Muller, we went for the museum specifically and I thought it was like running the Amazing Race to get there: two trains, a bus, a long walk from the bus (just missed the half-hourly shuttle to the gate) then a bike ride? Yes the museum was amazing, but the round trip plus museum visit ate up and entire day. If you're going "just" to picnic and not see the museum, go to Vondelpark in Amsterdam proper and save yourself time/hassle.

Missypie, when are you thinking of going?
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Old May 24th, 2011, 04:59 AM
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It is possible to get to the Kroller Muller with one train - direct from Amsterdam to Ede Wageningen, then a bus to Otterlo, another bus, to Hoge Veluwe, and about 5 minutes walk to the museum. It does take a bit longer (1 hour 50mins)than changing in Utrecht (1 hour 35mins), but it is a matter of which you prefer.

How about canoeing or taking a whisperboat ride? If that appeals let me know and I'll suggest some places.
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Old May 24th, 2011, 05:31 AM
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A few years ago, we spent about 5 days in the Netherlands with our kids (then 14 and 11), and here is what we loved:
Amsterdam is beautiful and very easy to walk because of the lay-out of the town. Go on a canal cruise, visit the Westerkerk (if I remember correctly you could go up the tower for an amazing view), Anne Frank House, the performers on Leidse Plein, flower market, shops in the Jordaan and street markets on the weekends.
We loved the cheese market on a Friday morning in Alkmaar - hectic busy but entertaining. The cheeses and little pancakes were great. It's about a 40 min train ride from Amsterdam.
Zaansche Schans - we spent much more time there than expected - very interesting.
Volendam is a beautiful town and we had wonderful apple pie and cream.
The kids loved Madurodam and the maritime museum in Rotterdam.
Coming from South Africa, we really liked the beach and freezing water at one of the resorts close to Den Haag.
It's a lovely country and I'm sure you will have a wonderful holiday.
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