Belgium
Brussels Capital

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    • Day 107

      Brussels

      July 2, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Daniel started the day with a run while Gab chatted with friends from home. We then headed to the Grand Place to meet up for our free walking tour! This was one of the longest and also most informative tours we had done so far on our trip with a very charismatic guide called Adrien. We learnt a lot during our 4km tour which went for almost 3.5 hours (with a short break half way through where we bought traditional frites!)

      We learnt some interesting things such as:
      - Belgium has 3 official languages being French, Dutch and German. 60% of the country is Dutch speaking and 40% of the country is French speaking (and less than 1% are German speaking). Brussels is the only multi-lingual city in Belgium and everything is supposed to be displayed in French and Dutch, however, 90% of people living in Brussels speak French and 10% speak Dutch.
      - The site of the Grand Place was originally a market back in 11th century and it was later destroyed during conflict and rebuilt. The Grand Place is very impressive and contained the city hall (which is still used as a city hall today) and houses that were for different guilds (such as for writers, painters and bakers).
      - In Belgium, people have to get married in their local city hall so people in Brussels have to get married on Saturday mornings in a small hall in the city hall (with a 20 minute time slot).
      - The city hall with the large spire is the only original building standing in The Grand Place as all others had burnt down and been reconstructed. The spire is actually not in middle of building and as such the building is not symmetrical (the original design was symmetrical but then they decided to add to one side of the building but there wasn't enough room to make it symmetrical).
      - There is a massive comic book industry in Belgium, including their most famous character - Tin Tin! There are over 70 comic book murals scattered on walls around the city of Brussels. Reading comic books is very popular for people of all ages and the French speaking comic book industry sells 10million copies every year (unlike the English speaking industry which serves many more people but sells around 1million copies a year).
      - We stopped at the Manneken Pis - a statue of a little boy peeing from the 13th century. No one knows who and why it was put there (although there are many crazy legends!) So, basically the statue is famous for being famous but the people from Brussels don't mind it being their unofficial mascot - they don't take themselves seriously! There are a group of people who dress up the Mannekin Pis and he has over 1000 outfits. We saw him dressed up in a uniform of a student union.
      - There is a lot of diversity in beer which is why it is so famous in Belgium! There is said to be around 25,000 different beers in Belgium, and about 80% of beers aren’t exported, so try them while you are there (which we plan to do!!)
      - Belgium has an interesting history having been controlled by the Spanish, French and Dutch at different times. The Belgian Revolution was in 1830.
      - There is a river under Brussels (called River Senne) which was covered up to get rid of the problem of cholera which killed many people in Brussels in the last 1800s.
      - Traditional frites (fries) in Brussels are made by twice fried potatoes in beef fat oil at two different temperatures - delicious!
      - We learnt all about chocolate! The cacao bean was bought to Europe in 1600s but solid chocolate as we know it was a 19th century creation. There were a number of rules which were followed closely in Belgium including that you can’t have anything less than 45% cacao mixture otherwise can’t call it chocolate, you could only use certain ingredients and you can't use vegetable oil instead of cacao. So for example, companies such as Cadbury/Hershey had to rename their products to chocolate-flavoured candy. These rules are mostly no longer in place but most Belgian chocolatiers still follow these traditions which is what makes the chocolate so good!

      We stopped for a quick lunch break and then tried our next Belgian delicacy - waffles! We were recommended to get one from a food truck as it is the freshest and it did not disappoint, the taste was incredible!!

      We then continued to walk around the city and spot some more of the comic murals, more peeing statues (one of a girl called the Jeanneke Pis and one of a dog called Het Zinneke!) and then a very interesting looking concrete truck made out of steel!

      We finished the day with a few authentic Belgian beers in an old school pub recommended by our walking tour guide (called Les Brassiers). Gab tried an amber beer made by monks (a trappist ale) called Orval and Daniel tried a popular ale called Jupiler. We then headed back to the Airbnb.
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    • Day 108

      Brussels

      July 3, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

      We started the day with a call home before heading out on our day of exploring the beers of Belgium!

      Our first stop was Brussels oldest brewery where we learnt about the process required to brew ‘Lambic’ beer. The production of this beer does not use modern cooling tanks and temperature control, and as such cannot be brewed in summer when it is too hot. Instead, it relies on the natural weather environment and traditional methods like using wind to cool the beer as it is produced. It was very cool seeing the entire process from mashing the ingredients through to bottling and then finished the tour with a few samples of the lambic beer. It had a very interesting taste and is more similar to a wine rather than a beer, which makes sense given it is aged in a oak barrel. This type of process of making wine is only now done in Belgium and is very rare.

      We walked for a bit from the brewery and checked out some more comic book murals across the city (and we even checked out a comic book store which was very cool!)

      Our next stop involved ticking off another important Brussels food tradition - mussels! We had some delicious mussels and fries accompanied by a couple of very flavourful beers, a red rosè (made with raspberries) and triple amber!

      There was one last "must eat" item in Brussels and that was chocolate! We went to Mary’s, the oldest shop in Brussels (which was the first to officially be the chocolate of choice for the royal family). Mary's was highly recommended by our tour guide from yesterday and they use traditional chocolate making techniques so we had to give it a go! It now has chains all over Belgium. We tried a couple each including a salted caramel dark chocolate, peacan chocolate and dark chocolate mousse (which was our favourite!) The chocolate was nothing short of delicious and gave us the energy to continue on with our pub crawl!

      We went to the Delirium Cafe, where we tried their ‘Beer Meter’ - a long paddle of 10 quite sizeable tasting beers! We enjoyed the various flavours as we made another call ‘home’ - to Daniel’s parents in the US!

      We made our final stop at a bar called Gist (dutch for yeast), which brew their own beers and just so happened to have happy hour whilst we were there! We enjoyed some strong sours (which Gab loved), amber and dark beers as the days' drinking was starting to catch up with us! We had some great chats and lots of fun sitting outside enjoying the little bit of sun.

      We made it back to the Airbnb in one piece to have dinner and watch a movie and then called Daniel’s cousins in the US before heading to bed!
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    • Day 7

      Brussels (Pt3- GrandPlace, Mannekin Pis)

      July 16, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

      The centre of Brussels' old town is an extraordinary UNESCO heritage listed square called Grand Place (the translation from French is exactly what it sounds like) surrounded by 14-17th century buildings covered in gold leaf. We then went to see the Mannekin Pis statue (that translation is about what you think it is too - Little Boy Pissing), a very important cultural symbol for Brussels for reasons that seem very hard to quite pin down. I also visited Jeanneke-Pis (Little Girl Pissing), which is much newer and about 600m from her 'brother'.Read more

    • Day 72

      Farewells to yurt and friends

      July 31, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Today we woke up for the final time in the yurt. We packed everything up, grabbed one final bacon sandwich and headed to Brussels. The drive was fairly easy and it was time to say farewell to Holly and Kate. It was so nice spending time all together and the group really got along so well. We'll see Kate soonish but it'll be a while to we see Holly, the newest UK convert. Kate is off to Paris then home and Holly is off to Paris as well but then will continue her travels.
      We then navigated back through Brussels to the outskirts to our accommodation. It was confusing to find the accom but luckily a lady eventually came out with our key. We then turned the Matilda's game on and it was almost half time, so after a brief sit we headed into the main centre.
      We found an Irish pub and watched the end of the game which was very exciting. We then walked trying to find somewhere for lunch. After passing a few places, one place got us as the waiter put on an Aussie accent after asking where we are from. We then visited a bar named the Squire which had a horse shoe as its logo and horses on every table. The waiter was wild and when I went to pay, the waiter and I were dancing together. He literally grabbed my hands and we did a quick two step. Dance is the universal language. On our exit, some other guy was also having a boogie with us. The Squire really was my scene.
      Next we walked to what Liisa dubbed the 'oldest shopping street in the world' which was literally home to about 10 chocolate/macaron shops. Liisa tried 3 different macarons and had a good time. We then got a Belgium waffle, however we weren't allowed to sit in the shop unless we all bought a drink... So we struggled to eat them outside with what resembled a toothpick. Erin was the Waffle Wally and somehow managed to have cream on her nose. We had seen this souvenir of a small boy statue peeing literally EVERYWHERE so had to check it out. It was Pissing Boy, potentially the son of the original Pissing Men (see Prague day). It was also a tiny statue, which is allegedly a replica. We bought souvenirs anyway as it was hilarious.
      We then caught the train back and walked once again in the rain. Had a shower and watched some Vampire Diaries. It's been a big few days for us all.
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    • Day 3

      Radfahren in Brüssel

      August 1, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Das Royale Belge liegt eher im Speckgürtel der belgischen Hauptstadt, umgeben von etlichen zum Verkauf stehenden ehemaligen zumindest diplomatischen Gebäuden/ wenn nicht Botschaften. Die CD Parkplätze sind erhalten 😁. Wie ich erlesen konnte, sind die sich deutlich in der Minderheit befindlichen deutschsprachigen Belgier, völlig beleidigt, dass sie nicht so richtig mitregieren dürfen. Geguckt hatte ich nach der Amtssprache und das ist augenscheinlich ein weites Feld und sicherheitshalber wurde Belgien in 3 eigenverantwortliche Territorien unterteilt, die nur durch Zitat: König, Kunst und Fußball zusammengehalten werden.
      Hm 🤔 jut… Gestern hat es nur seeehr wenig geregnet, deshalb sind wir mit dem Rad ins Zentrum gefahren und haben erst einmal zügig alle Outdoor Sehenswürdigkeiten abgeklappert und nur wenig Schoki gekauft. Die Innenstadt ist grandios, voll und eigentlich eine riesiges Fressmeile 🤩. Auf dem Rückweg sind wir noch ein paar Umwege gefahren und dann im Hotel ins Fitness/Wellness Studio gefallen. Aperol/Campari und 💤😁😁😁
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    • Day 33

      Paris to Brussels

      October 31, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Heading North

      Left the boat and spent the morning travelling to Brussels. After I'd checked in, had a wander towards the old town and took the hop-on-hop-off toot bus around the major monuments to get myself acquainted with the city and learn some more about its history. We were interrupted by a guy on a unicycle juggling fire holding up the traffic. Had frites - chips with sauce - for dinner, my first Belgian specialtyRead more

    • Day 58

      Belgyum

      October 31, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Today we left beautiful rainy Paris on a 5 hour bus trip to a beautiful and rainy Brussels.

      Once we arrived we dropped our bags off at our hostel and made our way downtown. We enjoyed some Belgium waffles, and then some hot chips - which they are apparently known for. Both foods were incredible.

      We strolled and explored some more before we came across a barber, and Phill decided to go in for a hair cut as his was getting long - little did we know he would have to wait 50 minutes (longer than any of the Disney rides!?) As the barber gave facials and liked to smoke in-between clients. All worked out, as the cut was worth it.

      We then spent the remainder of the night doing boring things in the common area like budgeting the rest of our trip as we're pretty much half way through!

      Step count;
      Bec - 18.6k
      Phill - 13.4k
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    • Day 3

      Brussels Day 2

      November 17, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

      Minor drama this morning as boiler down so no hot water. Reached out to Jean so will see what happens.

      Busy day planned. Guided tour round the centre and then metro to the Atomium.

      The tour was very extensive so didn’t make the Atomium today. Not to worry found the Delirium Bar - enormous range of beers mostly quite strong.

      Good news boiler fixed, so shower, cassoulet and a quiet night in.
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    • Day 2

      Brussels Day 1

      December 2, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 0 °C

      Our night was amazing - we are LOVING Brussels!!

      1.) Saw the famous Mannaken Pis statue (dressed up for Christmas which is so fun)

      2.) Had dinner at “NuetnigEnough” - i had the puff pasty pie and classic “Brussels Frites (fries).” Such a cute small restaurant, only ~8 tables, very friendly staff and delicious food :)

      3.) Then had Belgian beer at La Port Noir which used to be the kitchen for a monestary! Such a cool place and loved my cherry sour beer.

      4.) Ended the night with a (surprise) lightshow in Grand Place, followed by “Gluhwein” (mulled red wine) and the Christmas Market right by our cute AirBnb ✨
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    • Day 2

      La première galère !

      January 11 in Belgium ⋅ 🌙 -5 °C

      En commençant à enregistrer les billets d'avion dans le train pour Bruxelles, on se rend vite compte que quelque chose cloche. Une fois arrivés, un appel passé à la compagnie confirme la mauvaise nouvelle : notre vol long courrier est annulé... Impossible pour le moment de nous proposer d'alternatives. La seule solution, prendre notre premier vol pour Munich et se rendre au hub Lufthansa une fois sur place.

      Toutefois, cela ne nous empêche pas de profiter de la capitale belge : manger une frite sur la Grand Place 🍟, traverser la Galerie de la Reine 👑 et boire une bière au Délirium Café 🍻 ! Puis direction l'aéroport en bus.

      La nuit s'annonce courte, entre l'excitation du départ et l'incertitude qui règne sur la suite du trajet. On la passera sur la banquette d'un Starbucks au milieu d'un hall quasiment vide.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Bruxelles-Capitale, Region Brüssel-Hauptstadt, Brussels Capital, Brussel·les Capital, Bruselas, Région de Bruxelles-Capitale, Regione di Bruxelles-Capitale, Brussel, Bruxelas-Capital, Brysselregionen

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