Belgium Ypres

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  • Day 46

    Days 44 and 45

    October 3, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    Day 44
    Day 2 of Battlefields tour.

    Photos - 1 and 2- after attending a short rememberance ceremony at the Menin Gates we had dinner with our guide at a really nice hotel in Ypres, Belgium called the Depot. Volunteers conduct this service which includes playing the last post at 8pm 365 nights a year in appreciation of all those who served - an incredible comittment
    Photo 3 - Tyne Cot - largest Commonwealth war cemetery in the world
    Photo 4 - letter advising parents their son is deceased
    Photo 5 - remains of caterpillar mine crater - one of a series of mines that were placed along the German front line by tunnelling

    Day 45
    The tour of The Catacombs in Paris is approximately 2 km long and deep underground. It contains the bones of over 6 million people. There's 140 steps to go down and 112 to get out. The height dips to 5' 11" in some places. It's a bit freaky down there quite macabre and a bit eerie. Thankfully reasonably well lit !!

    Photos 6 and 7- Catacomb's tunnels
    Photos 8 - 10 - bones

    Last night in Paris heading for Singapore via Dubai tomorrow night.
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  • Day 45–46

    Days 42 and 43

    October 2, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Day 42 was meant to be utopia for John who found a sports bar to watch the rugby league grand final live. He then went to the Prix de l'arc de Triomphe (Melbourne Cup of Europe). At least the races part was good !!
    Photos 1 - 3- sports bar and races
    Video 1 - race crowd do the Viking clap like the Canberra raiders

    Day 43
    Photo 4 - Adelaide Cemetary outside Villers Bretonneux. An unknown soldier has been removed from this cemetary and placed in Canberra

    Photos 5, - 7with our guide at the John Monash Centre - a museum and interpretative centre that commemorates Australian servicemen and women who served on the Western Front during the first world war
    Photo 8 - battlefields and war cemetaries visited today
    Photo 9 - Memorial to women at the Lochnagar Crater
    Video 2 - Lochnagar Crater (tunnel dug under major German command centre in order to blow it up)
    Photo 10 - memorial to all animals used in the war effort - horses, mules, dogs and pigeons
    Photo 11 - Pheasant Wood cemetary at Fromelles - newest war
    cemetary created following the discovery of 6 mass graves in 2008
    Photo 12 - VC Corner Australian Cemetary - the only cemetary that has just Australian soldiers (known and unknown)
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  • Day 10

    Veloautobahn ans Meer

    April 12 in Belgium ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    Fast hätten wir einen Pausentag in Tournai eingelegt, doch dann haben wir uns für das "etwas" sportlichere Programm entschieden und sind losgefahren...
    Und da die Kilometer nur so purzelten sind wir schlussendlich 100 km bis ans Meer gefahren 😉.Read more

  • Day 20

    Rifleman Frederick Alley

    January 2 in Belgium ⋅ ⛅ 6 °C

    Rifleman Frederick Alley DOD 13Dec17 Age unknown

    Killed in Action

    3 NZ Rifle Brigade, 3 Battalion

    Grave Plot II, C.22

    The site of the current cemetery was until the Third Battle of Ypres in no man’s land. On July 31, 1917, the 15th (Scottish) Division captured the Lost Corner and Freiberg with the 55th (West Lancashire) Division on their left flank. The cemetery was started the next month by the 15th and 16th (Irish) Division, under the name ‘New Cemetery, Frezenberg’. A few weeks later, however, a British plane crashed near the current ‘Cross of Sacrifice’, which earned the cemetery its current name, Aeroplane Cemetery. The cemetery was used by combat units until March 1918.

    The cemetery includes the graves of 15 men who served with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force.

    Plots II to VIII, and part of Plot I, were formed after the Armistice when graves were brought in from small burial grounds and the surrounding battlefields. There are now 1,105 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 636 of the burials are unidentified but special memorials commemorate eight casualties known or believed to be buried among them.
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  • Day 62

    Hill 60

    July 3, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Hill 60 was a strategic high point in the German lines. In June 1917, Australian and British tunnelers and miners exploded 19 mines beneath it and other hills along the Messines Ridge with devastating effect. It was an impact that, some said, was felt in London. This was a turning point in the Battle of Messines.

    The site has been preserved as it was at the end of the war, except for regrowth, so the craters can still be seen.
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  • Day 61

    Ypres

    July 2, 2023 in Belgium ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    We crossed into Belgium and the town of Ypres. It was completely flattened in the war and rebuilt by the end of the 1920's. Its destruction was used as a symbol of the devastation of war. It was described as a red stain on the ground, not from blood, but from pulverised red brick dust caused by bombing.

    It is well known as the home of the Menin Gate Memorial. Soldiers would pass through the gate in the towns ramparts on their way to the battlefields.

    You can't really see it at the moment as it is six weeks into a two year renovation. We will go to the nightly memorial service there tomorrow night.
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  • Day 20

    Esssex Farm Cemetery

    January 2 in Belgium ⋅ ⛅ 5 °C

    This cemetery is in the site where Canadian doctor John McRae wrote the poem “InFlanders Fields”.

    He was inspired to write it on May 3, 1915, after presiding over the funeral of friend and fellow soldier Lieutenant Alexis Helmer, who died in the Second Battle of Ypres. According to legend, fellow soldiers retrieved the poem after McCrae, initially dissatisfied with his work, discarded it.

    The location also still has the remains of a field aid station he had built.
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  • Day 20

    Corporal Alfred William Alley

    January 2 in Belgium ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

    Corporal Alfred William Alley DOD 20Oct17 Age 26

    Grave Enclosure No.2.I.D.11

    From the Battalion Diary:

    "15Oct17 Battalion camp moved from sheet 28 H.26.b.0.8 TO H.19.d.6.8

    16Oct17 X1A and Z1A batteries commenced the construction of shelters for men required. They are to camp at Hornby dump (J.25.a.47) until shelters are completed.

    21 Oct The following casualties occurred while a party was proceeding from Hornby dump to reserve positions held by X 1A & Z 1A batteries.

    9872 Cpt Alley AW and 32760. Haydon, AE killed in action by shell fire and 11339 HICKSON,H wounded/ All of X1A bty."
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  • Day 1

    Ypres, WW1 memorials & authentic weather

    November 19, 2024 in Belgium ⋅ 🌧 48 °F

    We left Calais and headed northeast to Belgium. Ypres (EE ‘ Preees). Our first stop lead us to the Menen Gate - originally a medieval gate and like many others destroyed multiple times. This gate is where many military fighting in this area walked through on their way to the battlefield. This is now a memorial and has hundreds of names on panels floor to ceiling.
    There is a wall surrounding Ypres center, which has been converted to a memorial park where we saw monuments / memorials to the Indian (India), Nepal and Australian military. One needs to remember the “ Sun never sets on the British Empire”. At the time. And those countries all contributed to the war.
    Ypres center has been rebuilt in the 1950’s and 1960’s as the entire town was demolished and burned not just in WW1 but again in WW2. This area of Belgium was the main front in WW1 and in WW2 it was the last area for Germany to conquer and get to France and their two main ports in Dunkirk and Calais. Which would allow them access to the English Channel and England.
    We then went to Hill 62.
    On the 2nd of June, 1916, the Germans launched an attack which gained ground in Sanctuary Wood, took Hill 62 and also Armagh Wood and Mount Sorrel to the south. This was a vantage point as they would be able to see whole battalions behind the line and no man’s land.

    We headed to the Sanctuary Museum. This museum is owned and operated by a family for over three generations. The original owner and his wife returned after World War I. As they were clearing the fields and finding remnants of the war, they started storing them in their barn. UK citizens would come by to view the battlefields with their loved ones had perished in this family would frequently take them out on tours of the trenches to see the antiquities and other items that were in the barn. They discovered that giving tours was more lucrative than trying to farm so they developed the idea of a museum.
    We toured the museum which started with stereo scopes with original 3d images from WW1.
    The collection of guns, helmets, uniforms, medals, photos, ammunition etc was incredible.
    Then we walked through a park area with original trenches and tunnels as well as bomb craters. It was raining and muddy and of course 49 degrees but felt like 30 degrees. And our imaginations let us feel what it must’ve been like to be a soldier in those trenches.
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  • Day 1–2

    Party und Gedenken

    July 21, 2024 in Belgium ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Gegen 4 bin ich in Ypern angekommen, schnell eingecheckt und dann die Stadt erkundet. Auf dem Marktplatz spielte ein Orchester 😁 wie cool.
    Und dann bin ich natürlich in den Regen gekommen 💦 was zu trinken gekauft und als ich wieder am Hotel war, war auch der Regen vorbei. Also weiter durch die Stadt und um 6 hab ich dann für ein Stündchen die Beine hochgelegt und kurz bei Leonie vorbeigeschaut, aber das Hotel WiFi ist so schlecht 😔
    Um 7 hab ich mich dann wieder aufgemacht im 'last post' gedenken zu sehen, da ich so früh da war, hatte ich nen Platz ganz vorne. Nach fast 90 Minuten stehen, taten mir die Knie so weh das ich kaum die Treppe zu dem Commonwealth Gräbern geschafft habe. Ober war noch eine sehr schöne Ausstellung und viele Gedenkstätten.
    Um kurz vor 9 war ich im Hotel, pünktlich zu Adrys Pinocchio Tour in Rom.

    Und jetzt gute Nacht morgen gibt es viele Gräber und Gedenkstätten. Die Fahrt dauert 90 Minuten, aber ich hab 6 Stunden Zeit
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