Summer of 23

juli - oktober 2023
  • Matt Tabone
  • Katie Ashton
The long awaited honeymoon Les mer
  • Matt Tabone
  • Katie Ashton

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  • Day 39 - Bardolino

    17. august 2023, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 27 °C

    Today we are set to leave Venice, but before we can leave the apartment we need to make sure all the trash bags are out - Venice has a unique system, people with carts go around and collect the rubbish bags, the people take these carts to a boat waiting which cranes the carts on and dumps their contents into the boat to be taken away. These people come door to door for the rubbish, so you either leave your rubbish out or they knock/ring your bell to let you know they are currently there.

    Our plan was not to stick around in Venice as it gets so hot during the day, at 10am with two suitcases, our back packs and a few bridges to muster, it was already a balmy 25 degrees. We got coffee along the way in the Jewish Ghetto & caught the bus out to the parking lot where the car is parked.

    We jumped onto the Autostrada heading for Lake Garda, our next destination. We arrived at Bardolino where our accomodation is for the next two nights, meeting Anja one of the workers to show us their car parking area. Anja was happy to hear about our travels so far, i mentioned in passing it was the honeymoon from 2020 we were on & she also commented how a couple from NZ a month ago stayed, that said Italians drive like crazy people!
    We checked in & went for a walk around Bardolino as Anja gave us a lot of recommendations on what to see & do. We walked around to the lake side for the view and grabbed some lunch and a spritz at La Preonda. We walked back around grabbed some Gelato along the way, looked at the town and headed back to the accomodation to relax. Once we were back Anja had given us a bottle of wine as a gift to celebrate the honeymoon, so I caught up on the blogs & Katie on her TikTok while drinking some wine!

    I had told Katie i really wanted to go see a church in the area… Katie was so thrilled to see yet another church, but she soon realised this wasn’t just your average church. We drove half n hour up into the hills to a village called Spiazzi and parked. From there it was a ‘gentle’ 10 minute walk to Santuario Madonna Della Corona, a very picturesque mountainside church circa 1625, on the walk down you can stop & view a sculptural depiction of Christ and the events on the day he was crucified. This church is built into the mountain with the left and rear wall being the stone from the mountain, its a steep walk down & you have to go through a tunnel to get to this, engineer me was loving this but also how they built such a monumental church here back then and we still can’t fix some roads!

    We drove back to Bardolino and parked the car again, went for a walk looking what to do for dinner. Dinner out actually sounded like a wee treat rather than our only option seeing we had cooked the last three nights! We saw along the lake front there was a Ferris wheel, this is where Katie tells me she has never been on a Ferris wheel… I was shocked, i know Canterbury show isn’t the best but Katie has been to the Melbourne show! So I had to take her on it, she came to become comfortable and enjoyed it, even if the emotions came out when it stopped and she thought something was wrong!

    We set off for dinner opting for Pizza at Pizzeria Bardolino, I was wanting some more wine so hastily ordered a litre of the house Rose to share… Thankfully my driving for the day had finished!
    We headed back to the accomodation, I had to have another small gelato due to the heat and to offset some of the wine!
    Les mer

  • Day 40 - Lake Garda

    18. august 2023, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Today we had no major plans sorted, except for the evening.

    So we had booked the day before to have be in the early breakfast sitting (The accomodation did two timed slots for breakfast through COVID and they found it worked amazing so kept it!) After breakfast our plan was to see how far around Lake Garda we could get with the car (It’s busy!)

    We drove through the historic town of Garda and as there is three main round abouts so it took a bit to navigate through, once through it was smooth driving. We tried to stop in one of the smaller villages but parking machine wasn’t playing ball so I stood admiring the view & the car parked without a ticket while Katie got some photos.
    We ended up north side of Malcesine, the village has a medieval castle lakeside, we opted for a walk into the village and lunch here. I was feeling a wee bit under the weather from the amount of wine, I may or may not of consumed yesterday, so we had burgers and chips for lunch. We walked through the village and started to head back to the car, it was getting hot and we wondering if we swim here or back at Bardolino (The real troubles on holiday) I was hot and bothered and feeling like I needed something to put a spring in my step, so we walked back to the car, got changed and headed 2minutes away from the car to a little pebble beach.
    Upon walking near the entrance of the car park I noticed a lot of cars lined up, most car parks were full as we came through hence why we were happy to walk a bit further. These people were waiting for someone to come out of the car park so they can get a car park, we found this very strange but if they are happy to wait in the sun, in their cars, I’ll still call them idiots! We got the beach, I went in first, now we are used to the Mediterranean sea, balmy 26-28 degrees… this was very cold. Lake Garda is 300m deep in some parts and is feed from the hills/Dolomite area surrounding the lake, so naturally its cold icy water. Nether the less, the body got used to it and it was very relaxing! Katie took longer but finally made it in!

    We drove back to Bardolino, on the drive we saw a motor bike rider had collided with a car, after seeing them ride around here I wasn’t surprised to see it, luckily he just seemed pretty cut up and some locals directing traffic.
    We rested, showered and got ready to have our night out in Verona. We have to drive 40minutes to Verona to watch the opera classic, Aida. The Verona opera festival has been held for 100years now and the shows take place in the Verona Arena, the Verona Arena is much like the Colosseum, just smaller and better preserved.
    We got to Verona and had dinner in Piazza Bra, the piazza is set with the Verona Arena at the centre, this is the first time we opted for a dinner near a land mark - food was all good, nothing amazing - The Gelato we found down the road was worthy of a mention though!

    We went into the Arena ready for the show, there is strict rules about what your allowed to bring and no recording devices. Well when it started there was masses on their phones recording so really helped the ambiance of the Opera… I opted to take a photo as they finished the intermittence of the show seeing everyone else had taken some. Photos don’t do it justice for the Arena or the performance itself.
    We were seated up top of the Arena, this is on the stone steps so luckily we had brought blankets and jackets to sit on.
    The Opera was amazing, I wasn’t expecting the end of the story as I had I only read the story 3/4 of it online, so that was a nice surprise.

    We drove back to Bardolino to our accomodation after the performance which ended at midnight.
    Les mer

  • Day 41 - The Road to Milano

    19. august 2023, Italia ⋅ 🌙 29 °C

    Today we leave Bardolino and start making our way to Milan, our final destination for Italy.

    We were tossing up heading north around Lake Garda and seeing a small town called Limone Sul Garda or head to the South and see Sirmione. Seeing the traffic we encountered yesterday, we played it safe and headed for Sirmione.

    The drive was nice going through lake side towns, as it was a Saturday it seemed very busy. We got outside of Sirmione and noticed traffic building up trying to get in the central car parks, we saw some free ones on a side road and thought suckers… we stopped for a coffee and a toilet pit stop, this is when I looked at google maps, reason everyone is willing to wait in massive lines is the 40 minute walk from where we were having coffee to the castle of Sirmione, Who’s the suckers now… well Katie took the backpack to save me so lets say Katie!
    We got into Sirmione is now a resort town, it is known for its thermal baths & Roccas Scaligera, the medieval castle over looking the lake. At the tip of the peninsula of Sirmione is the site, Grotte di Catullo which is ruins of an old Roman Villa some 2000 years old, also the best beach in the area we were told. We grabbed some lunch and then opted for something we hadn’t really researched much, a 10euro boat tour of the peninsula for 25minutes. The company drives your around the peninsula, a couple of facts along the way, nice pictures and then gives the boat a wee bit of gas before the end for some fun. You come back under the draw bridge to the castle which was tight but awesome to see.

    After this I had seen local busses running, found that for 1.50euro each we could catch the bus 5 minutes away from the car! So we opted for that instead of being sweaty messes.
    Once back at the car we headed for Milan, a hour and half drive, as it is Italians main time to Holiday we found the Autostrada to have ‘Traffico Intenso’ - or in plain English, a heap of traffic so 130km wasn’t on the cards.
    We got into Milan, got into the AirBnb and dropped our bags off and I went to take the car back alone to save Katie’s feet! Now I am not saying that I missed Katie in that short 10minute drive, but my phone decided to not connect to apple CarPlay, I did run a red light, I did get tooted and yelled at an intersection, for not going on a green when cars were blocking me and I got yelled at by the Europcar lady for parking in a taxi zone while trying to work out where she wanted the car parked. So Katie will now not be allowed to stay back doing the washing in future.

    I opted to walk back as it was a 25minute walk and grabbed some supplies from the supermarket.

    We had always planned to go to QC Terme, a tranquil Spa in Milan with lush gardens with saunas and spa pools. The spa is famous for its sensory rooms - such as a sauna set at 50degrees with soothing music and smells like roses, a rain room with screens around and when a storm comes on the screen it starts raining from the ceiling. They also have different kinds of relaxation rooms.
    Katie & I found this great after the stress of the Metro - I brought a MilanoCard which no one can tell me how to activate it, (I even researched this massively) so I now have a dud card & had to buy a day metro pass. Also have the MilanoCard people emailing me saying activate through the app, the app says I need to pick it up… all in all, a massive stuff around. Also had scammers trying to sell us metro tickets while I was working out the MilanCard, by the third one I wasn’t replying that politely!
    But the spa was amazing and very nice in the evening.
    Les mer

  • Day 42 - Milano

    20. august 2023, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Today is our last full day in Italy, seeing we had a late night from the spa last night, it was a slow morning. Also most things don’t open until 10am so wasn’t in a rush.

    After breakfast at the apartment we caught the metro into town. We started the day off at the Duomo, we weren’t going in or up it but had a walk around it. We had to dodge the normal scammers, trying to give you/pay for bird seed for the pigeons (rats with wings) and the ones trying to help take pictures of you.
    We moved to the side of the Duomo to Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, a luxurious shopping centre with shops that we were only too happy to window shop from.
    We walked around the area of San Babila which again had shops that Katie opted to window shop from thankfully. We were hoping to find a certain store with the bag Katie has her eye on, unfortunately due to this time being the main time Italians take off, a lot of the smaller shops were shut.

    We ended up out in an area called Guastalla, again another store shut so we found some lunch. I found a pizzeria called Spontini, they do pizza by the slice and isn’t the average Italian pizza. Thick and crispy base, Katie had margarita and I had one that ended up having blue cheese & bacon on it. It was fantastic.
    We took the metro to the Brera area and walked around the narrow streets, by this time it was getting hot, Katie’s feet had gone back to their normal European ways, so we opted to head to central station to figure out the bus ride in the morning.
    With stuff all help about the morning bus we made one last stop before heading back to the apartment.

    We went to Shoah Memorial of Milan, this exhibit is the spot where many carts got loaded with Jews to get either sent to Asuchwitz or camps in Italy during the war. The carts were loaded at night under the main tracks, they were then shunted forward, moved to the elevator and the cart would rise to the main tracks then hooked up to a locomotive to move. This was so it was out of site of the normal business of the railway station through the day.
    They have carts on display, the elevator that was used, videos of survivors, a library for survivors stories and a classroom for students to come and learn.

    After this we headed back to the apartment, Katie had a nap and I had a beer and caught up on finding penguins.

    We headed out for dinner in the area we are staying in, we ended up at the bar NoLoSo, they offer a drink and an appetiser for 12euro each. I obviously had a spritz, the first appetiser board came out and we were kind of taken back, is that what we paid for?! Then the second came out and it was a great feed!

    We headed back to the apartment to pack ready for our flight in the morning.
    Les mer

  • Day 43 - Cioa Italy, Dzień dobry! Krakow

    21. august 2023, Polen ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    Today we fly out of one of the 3 airports in Milan… of course we are flying trusty Ryan Air so we are at the furthest one away. We left our accomodation at 6.30am and walked to the station and got on s shuttle to the airport, there was a man sitting in front of us sniffling and if looks could kill from Katie, this man would of been dead before the bus departed central station!

    We got to the airport, went straight through the security. Now I am not saying I don’t listen to my lovely wife but some idiot decided to not take out the butter knives out of the backpack and put in checked. That idiot got stopped and checked by security, his lovely wife throwing eye daggers from afar! So the butter knives got taken off me and I now need to find some new ones & will most likely buy Katie a leather hand bag too!

    Ryan Air as per usual were splendid to fly with, we got on and sat down, got told we would be sitting for 20-25minutes till we could get pushed back. Not 5 minutes after that, the captain come over and announced the situation had changed, ‘yep, we can leave now,’ in a not so reassuring surprised tone. Also another perk of flying Ryan Air, I booked myself as the window seat… I got to my ‘window seat’ to find there was no window… so not a lot of views to be had there!
    We got to Krakow, jumped on the train heading for the city.

    Once here I tried to get in contact with the accomodation about dropping the bags off at 2pm, magically he didn’t see his phone but answered when I called to check in at 3pm. So while we waited we had an amazing lunch at Lajkonik Piekarnia i Kawiarnia - amazing sandwiches! We also had a walking tour at 3pm that we cancelled and jumped on another for 4pm, so we checked in and got ourselves ready and headed to the meeting point for the walking tour.

    The walking tour started at Barbican, a defensive gateway from the 1490’s once linked to the city walls. We moved to the statue of Grunwald, the only battle won against Germany in 1410. The guide took us through town showing us interesting things like in the stones of the building of an entranceway, there are holes to extinguish your flame pole acting as light back in the day, also instead of house numbers, as many couldn’t read, they used animal pictures - the one she showed us was a peacock - FYI we are getting one of these instead of numbers!
    We moved into Market square, Europe’s biggest open air market square! With St. Mary’s Basilica a focal point of the square. We moved down to the university learning about the buildings and war time, and then onto Okno Papieskie. An artwork on the window where Pope John Paul II talked to a crowd of singing young people when he visited when Poland was still under communist ruling.
    We finished the tour where Katie thinks she should live… Wawel Royal Castle, this is from the 14th century and prettified in a variety of later styles. On Wawel Hill you have Wawel Cathedral, which has bones at the front door from what locals at the time of finding thought to be a dragon - no just whale and mammoths.
    Krakow and Poland have a rich history, especially when Poland didn’t exist from 1795 - 1918 due to getting split between other countries, then after the war getting the whole country shifted to the West.

    We took the guides advice and went to a local polish restaurant, Gospoda Koko, you can sit on ground floor or go down stairs into the basement which is pretty cool. Now the Italians do great pizza and pasta, Polish know how to do cakes and chicken (haven’t tried cakes… Wednesday!!) The food was amazing and so was the local Koko craft beer!

    We slowly walked back to the accomodation to get some rest for tomorrow.
    Les mer

  • Day 44 - Auschwitz Memorial & Museum

    22. august 2023, Polen ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    Today we got up early, had breakfast in the apartment to go to the bus station, we are off to see and pay respects to Auschwitz-Birkenau.

    We got told yesterday the bus was at 7:25am, today the bus is now at 8:05am and gets us to Auschwitz at 9:19am… our tour starts at 9:30am, should be fine.
    While waiting for the bus, I opted to buy an obwarzanek, it’s a bagel that the dough is boiled for 10seconds in 65degree water.
    Then I decided to start googling, and no our bus gets in at 9:30am… So the bus trip was a wee bit panicky as we had a 6hour tour and they only do one a day. We got to Auschwitz at 9:35am, talked to the desk and we got escorted to our group thankfully, we only missed an 8 minute intro video.

    We spent 3 hours in Auschwitz going through the blocks and exhibitions. As we were on the longer tour we got to see Block 3, the most untouched block showing the living conditions in the camp.
    After a half n hour break we got on the bus to Auschwitz II-Birkenau which takes 10 minutes. We spent 2.5hours here on the grounds. Birkenau was mostly destroyed by the Nazi’s before liberation day and the old blocks torn down by returning locals, as the Nazi’s had destroyed their brick houses to build the Blocks, so the locals started using what was at Birkenau.

    After the tour it was a bit too process what we had heard and seen, though our Polish guide spoke very fast which somewhat helped that we didn’t have enough time to fully comprehend exactly what we were being told at times.
    We rode the bus back to Krakow, I was pretty exhausted so caught a nap while Katie decided to film me…

    We got back to the apartment and got freshened up and headed for dinner. Another recommendation from the guide yesterday, Resyauracja Cechowa, another traditional restaurant. The food in Poland is amazing!

    After dinner we walked through Market Square, stopping to watch the lightning around us light up the night sky. We got some gelato and went back to the accomodation.
    Les mer

  • Day 45 - Krakow, Poland

    23. august 2023 ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    Today we had nothing planned apart from the thought a walking tour would be nice to fit in for the Jewish area and maybe a tour of the Wieliczka Salt Mine. We didn’t want a too early start so we decided to do the walking tour for 10.30am. We had breakfast in the accomodation (side note: this accommodation is great for location but the aircon doesn’t even pump out air properly so we are getting hot at night - it’s what you get in cheap accommodation!)

    We set off for our day and stopped off at Stary Kleparz, a local farmers market that is set up daily. We grabbed a coffee here from a local coffee shop, in one corner is the coffee machine, another corner the coffee roaster machine, and a heap of coffee bags everywhere else!

    We walked through old town towards the Jewish Ghetto area. Our tour starts at the Old Synagogue, this is the oldest Synagogue in Krakow but they don’t actually know the date it was built… somewhere between 1407 - 1490’s, somewhere around there! We walked through the Kazimierz district where a lot of Jews were at Synagoga Remu for one of their Rabbi’s festivals - seemed like a party inside going off at 10:45am.
    The guide took us through the catholic area of Kazimierz where there are 3 churches which you can see from Plac Wolnica, the main square of the area. We went over the most recently built bridges in Krakow, Father Bernatek’s Bridge, which has sculptures of acrobats by artist Jerzy Kedziora hanging in the middle of the bridge. This leads to the Jewish Ghetto where we stopped to see the front of St. Joseph’s Church which is a gothic style church, this the edge of the Ghetto but originally was planned by the Nazi’s to be in the Ghetto. We walked through the area that once was gate one of the Jewish Ghetto through the war, walking the streets it was hard to imagine the amount of Jewish people the Nazi’s put here during the war to be housed. Our tour finished at Plac Bohaterow Getta, an artist piece with empty chairs in the square, each chair represents 1000 Jews that died from the Ghetto.
    The tour was good, felt like we should of watched Schindler’s list first as there were many references to that unfortunately.

    For lunch we found a place right where the tour ended called Matt’s Cheesesteaks, we had a burger and I had to have an oreo shake, it was good and as a follow Matt, I recommend the food and Matt’s sauce.

    We took the train out to Wieliczka Salt Mine, Katie was somewhat happy to come down the 135m underground so we had booked tickets for both of us. On the way down there is 380 steps to start with. The mine was started in the 13th century when they accidentally found lumps of Rock Salt, today there is sculptures made out of Rock Salt, Chapels, Chambers and Saline Lakes you get to see. The tour was good but had a very touristy vibe and had pretty much felt like I had seen the best of it online, nether less a good way too see some amazing mining history.

    We went back to Old Town and went on the hunt for dinner, we found a place called Domowe Przysmaki, this had a flute busker across the road… we all know I’m a sucker for a busker now - so we sat outside and had dinner. I had the tradition pork chop & Katie had the tradition potato pancake (In Katie’s words, with a whole heap of shit on top) That shit was very nice though!

    We finished the night off with a Good Lood ice cream, I had seen people with these ice creams for days and hadn’t stopped for one. Now I know why people stopped, it was amazing!! They have flavour of the day and amazing tasting waffle cones, I had Walnut & Maple scoop and Katie had Dark Chocolate. This was right around the corner from the accomadation so an easy stroll back!
    Les mer

  • Katie making sure the saftey briefing is on point

    Day 46 - Antwerp, Belgium

    25. august 2023, Belgia ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Today we woke up early to catch our flight to our next country we visit, Belgium. We got up at 4.45am got ready and we were in the Bolt (European Uber & cheaper than Uber) by 5.35am. On this trip I realised I am happy that we didn’t drive in Poland as our bolt driver was doing 20-30km per hour over the speed limit and only slowed down at a point where the police sit at times.

    Our flight flew us to Vienna Airport where we changed to a larger plan to Belgium. We got to Belgium and took the train towards Antwerp.
    Our initial plans had us going to Brussels but upon researching we decided Antwerp was a better fit for us,
    We got to the station and were greeted to some rain, much different to the weather we were used too.
    Antwerp station is said to be the most picturesque train station in Europe, we could see why!
    We strolled to our accomodation in the rain and had a go at checking in seeing we were early, it was successful as the room was ready thankfully! We had a shower and got ready to go see some sites.

    We walked towards Grote Market along Meir which is the main shopping street in Antwerp. It is the most important shopping area in the country by number of shoppers & by the rent prices. It is said to be the Belgian equivalent to New York’s 5th Avenue!
    We stopped off and had our first taste of Belgian waffles at a cart along the mall, I was still hungry after this so went on the hunt for another local dish - Frites! (Belgian Chips!) We went to Frites Atelier, they were amazing! Makes me hungry just writing about them!

    We proceeded to see the Cathedral of Our Lady, bit had to miss with the bell tower towering through town! This is where Katie finally got to see what she thought Belgian architecture would look like!
    We moved towards Grote Markt, which is the central square of Antwerp, it is situated in the heart of the old city quarter. At the center of Grote Markt is the Braboo Fountain, the statue depicts a mythical Roman solider who supposedly killed a Giant named Durón Antigoon. We walked down to the riverfront where Het Steen, a medieval fortress & Antwerps oldest building is.
    I figured it would be rude to come to Belgium and not try a Belgium beer in my first day, so I found a little place well recommended for local brews, JazzCafe de Muze where I had a Lupus Tripel 8.5%. Now I was amazed at the 8.5% but the bartender assured me it had a nice sweet aftertaste, so I had to have a try. It didn’t knock you out being a 8.5% beer and definitely had the sweet aftertaste he told me about, even Katie said it was good.
    After a nice beverage we stopped off too Stadsfeestzall, a shopping mall in a neoclassical building. The building had been restored to it’s traditional glory after a fire in 2000.

    We went back to the accomodation to relax, I popped out to find some lollies for Katie and we were undecided on dinner. The accomodation in Krakow was great but the aircon was non existent so I was pretty tired from 3 nights of crappy sleep, Katie was tired from my busy schedule of Krakow!
    So for dinner we opted to go get Eeetwell Belgium, which is just a health food restaurant offering salads and juice, we were both happy with the choice!
    We went back to the accomodation, I saw an add for a Malteser McFlurry, now this isn’t the Malteser McFlurry we get, this is THE Malteser McFlurry with proper Malteser pieces crushed up, not just some Malteser thrown in like a savage. As you can tell I was happy with my find but my hips are not, after my daily intact of diabetic heaven we got back to the accomodation and ended the night with some Netflix.
    Les mer

  • Day 47 - Antwerp & Ghent, Belgium

    25. august 2023, Belgia ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Today we check out of our accomodation and at some point in the day head for the medieval town of Ghent.
    We woke up late as we were pretty exhausted from previous days, Katie timed it as nearly 12 hours of sleep. There is a local cafe incorporated at the hotel, for convenience we walked out of our room, down the corridor for a breakfast board as we couldn’t be stuffed walking and finding somewhere to eat. After breakfast we stored our luggage at the hotel and checked out.

    We had one purpose this morning… buy Katie new pants, hers had shrunk in the wash in Ireland and only noticed now! So off to Meir we went!
    Somehow we didn’t just leave with pants, also a few other pieces for Katie! I better say I brought another pair of shorts and some aftershave or she’ll yell at me for pointing her out! Once the shopping was done, we picked up lunch from the supermarket, got the bags and headed for the train station to catch the train to Ghent.
    The train ride is 1hour long and thankfully we didn’t prebook any tickets, they currently are running an offer of 2 for 1 tickets. So travel in Belgium turns out not too bad!

    Once at Ghent we decided walking the 24minutes wouldn’t be bad for us to the hotel… it was a very light mist of rain when we decided this… 10 minutes out from the accomodation the sky opened up, thankfully we had a wee bit of shelter from the trees and continued once it eased just a touch. The streets of Ghent are typical Europe… cobbles - so I ended up carrying the bags a lot through town. Once at the accomodation freshened up and headed out to see Ghent.

    Our first stop was Grasburg Bridge, a narrow short bridge over the Leie canal in the centre of Ghent, this looks to Korenlei & Graslei streets, lined with the famous architectural buildings. These buildings were once home to grain storage & where the Hermitage Hotel is, used to be a brothel with the famous swans facing away from each other on the front of the building, as we later found out.
    We stopped off at a local merchant - ‘Jack’s House’ for Oliebollen, Dutch donuts! Very fresh and tasted amazing.
    Ghent used to be a very rich city, let’s put it this way, our walk from the train station you can see many bell towers and churches. The Main Street you can catch buses and trams from, you can see 3 main churches with one of the monasteries beside it. You can also see the Belfry of Ghent Het Belfort van Gent, this is nick named Little Ben as it was made after Big Ben but looks similar to Big Ben.
    We decided, as we missed the walking tour we were thinking of, lets do a canal tour on a boat, 40 minutes for 10Euro. We went along 3 different canals seeing the buildings and the driver talking about them, I was sat next to the engine so I caught majority of the talking he did.

    After the canal tour I was on the hunt for some Belgium beer, we found a place that said tasting trays, had me sold. Until I ordered it and the tasting tray was 3 full beers I needed to drink on my own as Katie was happy with a Cider. The three beers I had were all Belgian beers, first was a Cherry Sour called Kwak (8%), next was a blonde ale called Antigoon (6%) & to finish off the tasting, a brown ale called Adriaen (10%). While at the tasting the weather had looked threatening to take a turn again, sure enough it did and it rained pretty hard. Katie looked at the weather app and it said should stop in 7 minutes, the bartender agreed, 7 minutes went past and sure enough apple forecast was right for once!

    After the tasting I was somewhat hungry, we decided keep it simple and got some more frites from Frites Atelier, I got the Thai Chicken Frites & Katie got the Parmesan & Basil Frites.
    Afterwards I figured I hadn’t eaten my way through Belgium so opted from a waffle… from the same place we got the donuts. The lady remembered me and laughed saying you can come back tomorrow, or in an hour your choice.

    We went back to the accomodation to climb the creaky stairs to our room.
    Les mer

  • Day 48 - Ghent & Bruges

    26. august 2023, Belgia ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    Today we had breakfast in our hotel, Erasmus Hotel, around us is the history of the hotel and in the centre of the rear windows of the dining room is a suit of armour. I didn’t get the chance to ask the owner the back history, as she talked a wee bit like a posh robot so figured I needed to keep my brain cells for later.

    We left the bags at the hotel and had a wonder around Ghent, no real plan just walk along the streets and admire the architecture. With the change of weather my hairy legs haven’t been keeping the warmth I am used too and wanted a fashionable change from jeans. I ended up buying a pair of cargo pants for me as again, NZ & Aus don’t get half the stuff they have here.
    We ended up at Vrijdagsmarkt which is an open air market place, Katie and I were getting hungry and saw a food truck selling bratwurst. So we had to get one for each of us.
    We walked around a little more and opted to head for Bruges, so we collected the bags, jumped on the tram to the station.

    We opted to catch the bus to the AirBnB after seeing some rain on the train and no doubt I would encounter more typical European streets with the bags in tow!

    We dropped the bags off and seeing they were still cleaning the AirBnb (we were early only dropping off the bags) we went for a walk. We figured our aim was Markt Square of Bruges… we never made it there on this walk though… As we were taking the easy 10 or so minute stroll in, we were admiring the street and I could smell the most beautiful smell in the world… WAFFLES! These weren’t just any waffles, this is Lizzie’s Waffles, the waffles are Extra Large and take up somewhat of a standard plate. We got the Waffle with fresh strawberries & homemade chocolate sauce. I also had to try a local Blonde beer, a Brugse Zot. After this intake of average calories of a adult for the day, we went back to the airbnb to relax.

    At 5pm I had booked us onto a walking tour of Bruges, We met in Markt Square under the famous Belfry Tower. We met our guide Pascal who was a very energetic guide who loved Bruges and Belgium in general, also really disliked the French so big tick there! We started off learning about how the open air Markt came to be from the traders and then how they built Belfort to use as a market instead of the main open air market. The belfry was added around 1240, when Bruges was an important centre of the Flemish cloth industry. After a devastating fire in 1280, the tower was largely rebuilt. The city archives, however, were forever lost to the flames. The octagonal upper stage of the belfry was added between 1483 and 1487, and capped with a wooden spire bearing an image of Saint Michael, banner in hand and dragon underfoot. The spire did not last long: a lightning strike in 1493 reduced it to ashes, and destroyed the bells as well. A wooden spire crowned the summit again for some two-and-a-half centuries, before it, too, fell victim to flames in 1741. The spire was never replaced again, thus making the current height of the building somewhat lower than in the past; but an openwork stone gothic inspired rooftop was added in 1822.

    We moved onto the facade of Gruuthusemuseum which is now the museum for all of ancient Bruges. This used to be a palace for a family that controlled the canals adjacent to the palace. We moved onto the Church of Our Lady, well the outside of it as it was shut, this has the marble statue carved by Michelangelo (Another Church Katie!). Next to the church is one of the oldest hospitals in Europe, they are unaware of the official date built as the documents were destroyed in the Belfry fire. The hospital is where the Nun’s used to run the pharmacy and help the sick. Also when the church stopped allowing Monk’s to perform surgeries on people, Barber’s started to learn medicine as they were already for with a knife, this is why Barber’s poles used to white and blue showing he could do both.
    We walked over to ‘Lover’s Bridge’ or it’s actual name, Boniface Bridge, this is called Lovers Bridge for the romantic views of the canal and town which couples come and take many photos on. Only issue is that Bruge was fairly poor in the early 20th century, when they made this bridge they had to reuse some materials… like headstones from the church cemetery straight in front of it… Romantic! We got taken to the ‘postcard view’ of Bruges at Rosary Quay, looking out towards the canals and can see the Belfry Tower & bell tower of Church of Our Lady. The tour ended in front of the Bruges City Hall which was built in 1376, this tour was really entertaining thanks to the guide being such an entertaining guy!
    Next to City Hall is the Basilica of the Holy Blood, which is a church (Think this is church number 4 we could see Katie?) which houses a phial claimed to contain a cloth with Jesus’s own Blood on it.

    After the tour we were pretty hungry so we opted for a place recommended by the guide and going to one of the smaller squares for dinner. We ended up at t’Lammetje where Flemish Beef Stew was on order for me, Salmon for Katie.

    We ended the night with another Malteser McFlurry, yes I had not eaten or drunk enough at this point! Walked back to the accomodation and our view from our window has the Belfry Tower, Bell Tower of the Church of our Lady & the Bell tower of Sint-Salvatorskathedraal. We could hear numerous bells through out the town!
    Les mer