Monday, June 29, 2015

Belgium! Bruges

On Friday of our trip to Belgium, we visited the beautiful town of Bruges! We took the train from Brussels-Central station -- an easy hour trip. We arrived late morning, and enjoyed walking around the town. It's about a 15 minute walk to the city center from the train station, through cobblestone streets. We walked along a couple of the canals in town, and found a place to eat a quick lunch on a sidewalk cafe. Charlotte napped briefly in the stroller for the walk into town. 





The central square in Bruges
The Belgian flag
We then took a boat tour through the city! It took about 30 minutes and was the best part of the day for me. Charlotte was initially crabby at having to sit still (again) after being released from the stroller, but I was able to distract her with pointing out other boats, bridges, flowers, birds, swans... anything I could find. She got totally into it and was yelling "Bridge!" excitedly every time we approached one, then "Bye bye bridge!" every time we would come out the other side. Her inability to say "R" yet made it sound a little different though... the other tourists seemed a little startled by the cursing toddler...






The amazing life of this dog, overlooking the canals of Bruges while napping!

Swan and her babies

After the boat tour, we went to sample some more Belgian beer!




Next, we headed to one of the churches in town (The Church of Our Lady) to see one of the few Michelangelo statues that is located outside of Italy. It's a beautiful Madonna & Child sculpture. It's behind glass, but you can view it from about 15 feet away. Lovely!


Before getting back on the train, we stopped in a park to let Charlotte stretch her legs a bit. She was pretty happy to do so :)



Belgium! Brussels

We took a 5 day trip to Belgium at the end of June! We traveled with our friends Jerome & Erin, as well their baby Gus, and Erin's sister JJ and her boyfriend Duane. We left on a Wednesday morning, taking the train from the Huntingdon station to King's Cross, then taking the Eurostar train through the Channel Tunnel (Chunnel!). It's a 2 hour journey from London to Brussels, which seemed surprisingly short for going all the way to the continent. Charlotte was good on the journey, and was sleepy enough to take a short nap on the way. 

We struggled a bit at the Brussels train station to figure out how to take a metro to the office where we could pick up the keys to our rental apartment. Poor signage and a somewhat complex combination of buses, above ground metro trams, and below ground subway trains, and machines that only take debit cards... we were glad when we got to the apartment! We had rented a place in the center of the town, near the Manneken Pis statue and the Grand Place square.

Charlotte enjoyed playing in the (non-functional) fireplace

That grin!
The "Tin Tin" mural directly outside our apartment windows.
We were in the apartment with the lowest set of windows in the picture.
We enjoyed being able to walk around the tourist center, where there are a lot of streets blocked off to allow for pedestrians to walk. We went out the afternoon we arrived to get some famous fries (frites) with mayonnaise and Belgian beer at a small bar in an alley that was advertised as the oldest bar in Brussels. We quickly found the fun of trying "degustations" -- sample trays of a variety of the Belgian beer. I really enjoyed most of the beers we tried across the trip, but especially Kwak and La Trappe, as well as some of the brands of Kriek (cherry beer) and Framboise (raspberry beer). We also enjoyed the other delicious treats famous in Belgium -- chocolate and waffles! Oh, and chocolate on waffles :) 

The chocolate shop directly across from our apartment
A display of waffle options in Brussels!
The sign in the shop next door... they clearly have had to clean up some waffle messes before!

The Grand Place consists of a very broad square with beautiful buildings around it. We walked through there multiple times on our way to meals; there were a lot of tourists and selfie sticks around the place!









Later in the afternoon on the first day, we went for a walk down toward the famous "Manneken Pis" statue, which was only about 75 yards from the entrance to our apartment. It is a lot smaller than I expected -- in fact, we saw some fake chocolate Manneken figurines in shop windows that were larger. Not really sure who is purchasing those!


We then came across a very random street fair/party that was celebrating Quebec. Yep, Quebec, Canada. There were lots of tents set up, some of which were selling Quebecois beer. We stopped and celebrated Quebec too! (Charlotte was not so sure.)


The next day, we met my college roommate Katy and her family at the train station in Brussels! They had been visiting Paris and were able to meet us for the day. It was so much fun to see them! We traipsed across most of Brussels (the map was somewhat deceiving...), grabbed some lunch with the kiddos, then went to a park to let the girls play! Paul, Jerome, and Michael went into a airplane/military history museum... Katy and I definitely had more fun enjoying the day outside watching Charlotte & Elodie play. We found some outdoor sitting at a bar and enjoyed a 6-beer sampler, then grabbed waffles before running them to their train. It was an awesome 7 hours with them!!

Just released from the strollers and not quite sure what's going on yet.
Hugs!! (Followed shortly by Charlotte trying to pick Elodie up using a similar maneuver.)
Michael, Katy, and Elodie... enjoying their Belgian waffles
Me & Katy -- Brussels/Davidson 10 year reunion :)

Monday, June 22, 2015

Day trip to Portsmouth

On Wednesday 6/17, Paul, Charlotte, and I headed south to Portsmouth, England! It's on the southern coast, southwest of London, and it took us about 3 hours to get there. It took a bit longer coming home due to traffic around London, but Charlotte was super good for the whole trip. Minimal whining until we were getting close to home! 

The big draw of Portsmouth is the Historic Dockyard, which is Paul's mecca. He loves British naval history in particular, and we had to go see the HMS Victory. It was an enjoyable day for me as well! We spent almost 6 hours down there, and we didn't see nearly everything. The admission pass gives you entrance for a full year, so we may be back to explore more. We focused our attention on the HMS Victory, the Mary Rose, the Museum of the Royal Navy, and a harbor tour. 

Here are a few pictures of our day! We didn't get any real pictures of the Mary Rose, but it was a really neat experience to see the remains of the flagship of King Henry VIII from the 1600s! They brought it up from the seabed in 1982 and it's been in the process of being preserved with a plastic/wax substance ever since. The archaeologists also brought up 17,000 artifacts from that time period. Very cool.

Charlotte and me in front of the HMS Victory
The officers' dining area

Mama and the little first mate on the Victory



The Spinnaker Tower, seen from the Harbor Tour
Someone was getting very sleepy but enjoyed looking at the "bubbles" in the water
OH so sleepy, poor peanut. She fell asleep in her stroller as soon as we got off the ship.
Looked to be some kind of race?
Looking out toward sea from the Harbor