Thursday, August 9, 2012
Pain on the Train
I'm lying in a hotel room overlooking the Amstel in Amsterdam, with Dave snoring beside me. It's about 8 a.m. and I've already been out on a wander around the city, photographing some graffiti that we saw while on our way to dinner last night. It's a beautiful clear morning, but I only saw about ten other people on the street. This is evidently not an early morning town.
(I could have guessed as much. I'm sure the five boisterous men and women who were rolling around with each other on the sidewalk beneath our window at 4 a.m. are asleep now, for example.)
The last time we came to Amsterdam, we flew. This time, we thought we'd take the train. So yesterday morning we hopped the Eurostar in London and went to Brussels, then switched to an Amsterdam-bound InterCity train.
The Eurostar leg of the journey went smoothly -- the train glided like an eel beneath the English Channel. But the InterCity leg proved more problematic. There were lots of stops, then a delay to fix some kind of problem on the tracks near Leyden, and then the train turned around early, short of our destination, to compensate for that delay. So we had to transfer to another train to get to Amsterdam Central.
For some reason, I neglected to bring any kind of nutrition along, and all we could buy on the train was a mini-can of "paprika" flavored Pringles (known as barbecue flavor to those of us from the States). So we were starving by the end of our six-hour journey. I grabbed a brie-and-walnut sandwich and none-too-fresh apple at the Amsterdam train station, and they were the best things I ever ate.
We love our hotel, though, and we had a great dinner at Restaurant De Kas last night with Dave's friend Annie from Michigan, and her husband and two sons. We met up with them last year in Reykjavik, and when we heard they'd be passing through Amsterdam this summer on their way to South Africa, we decided to rendezvous again. We plan to make our dinner an annual tradition. Next year: St. Petersburg! (Russia, not Florida.)
Dave has already vowed to spend today parked at a cafe, people-watching. Sounds great to me. First he needs to wake up, though.
(Photos: From the train platform in De Vink, a town outside The Hague where our train was delayed yesterday.)
I want to jump into your shoes! Although going under all of that water freaks me out...people watch/photo op- great!
ReplyDeletei like how dave sightsees!
ReplyDeleteTrain travel does have its bumps. But how cool to get on a train instead of flying over water! How long was the trip under under the Channel? I am not much of a fan of tunnels ... especially under water!
ReplyDeleteSay hello to Amsterdam for me!
I liked Amsterdam the few hours I spent there - it would be a lot of fun to go back & spend more time. For example, we went to a diamond cutting place when we were there & I'd rather go see tulips instead :)
ReplyDeleteThe reverse journey worked very well for us. High speed Thalys to Brussels Midi and Eurostar to London. I think now Eurostar goes directly to Amsterdam.
ReplyDeleteOh the pain... (the graffiti). Fun to read back this far. Thanks for the link.
ReplyDelete