EUROPEAN
VACATION
Belgium - received June 1
Belgium
Gent, Brugge &
Brussels
(Written by Steve May 31, 2005)
Downtown
Gent, Rush hour.
Have you
ever imagined what a place would look like and then go there and it looks
exactly as you had imagined? Well, that’s what all of Belgium is,
exactly how we imagined.
If you made
a few thousand ginger bread buildings and put them all together with streets
and canals running every where, that would be what Gent
and Brugge are like. Have you ever watched “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”? If you have, then you
know what we are talking about. The other thing that is kind of new is that
everyone is riding bicycles like the one the wicked witch from the west rode on
The Wizard of Oz. Everyone is riding these things, with suits and dresses and
babies and groceries, it is quite cool and so not North American. As you walked
down the streets you would couples in their 20’s going out on a date, each
riding their Mary Poppins bicycles down to the pub or
night club. Our first stop was Gent and aside
from the wonderful old town, we stumbled upon a little known secret. We met
some Canadians and many Americans, many folks from all over the world. They all
were in Gent and had the same operation. Hip
resurfacing. It is a procedure that is not accepted in the western world yet,
but one doctor here does 18 of them a week, 800 a year. He does most of them
for foreigners, like a fellow Firefighter from Boston we met. All of these folks have been
told that they need hip replacements and they would rather do this treatment
with little side effects and better results. I don’t know anything about this
type of surgery, but can tell you I saw ½ a dozen of these folks walking around
the lobby with no problem and little pain only 3 days after the surgery,
remarkable. If you want more info on this doctor go to www.hip_clinic.com.
Anyways we
drove from our hotel into the old city of Gent
and it was quite difficult to find your way around, but we did eventually make
it. The old city has trams that run down the hundred year old cobble stoned
streets and canals that snaked their way through out the city. The city centre
is quite small and easy and very fun to walk around, unless you get hit by one
of those trams that quietly sneak up behind you. The two coolest things aside
from the fantastic Belgium
beer is the Gravensteen Castle
and the Bellfry.
The castle
kept all the torture equipment that was used back in the good old days, and the
Bellfry was just one of those things you have to see.
Danika looks sleepy on the Bellfry stairs, but it was still a long way to the bottom
(366 stairs).
We left Gent
after 4 wonderful days and headed to Brugge, another
old city close to the ocean. We were fully loaded with maps and ready to
navigate the old cobblestone streets in search of our hotel located in the
centre of the city. Well, even with the latest maps we still managed to get
very lost. Oh, I wish we had a GPS! After an hour of stressful driving we
pulled up in front of the Crowne Plaza.
I will tell you right now, that I would not have a hope in h%$# of navigating
if Helen did not tell me where to turn or what direction to go. Madrid, Gent, Brugge and even
the Costa del Sol nearly brought me to tears.
Anyways, this city (Brugge) is much like Gent except it is way more touristy and larger. Zebrugge is right on the Canal that all the shipping
containers and rail cars come into by boat and into Europe.
Did you know that at one time Brugge was the 3rd
largest city in all of Europe? You have to see
this place to understand what I am talking about, but it is quite tiny in
comparison to major cities today. So we did exactly what we did in Gent and that was Churches, Castles, Eat, Eat, and have
waffles and coffee. The place is right out of a movie, I could never live here,
but I could visit it about 20 or 30 times a year. O.K. maybe not, but it is
very cool. I would love to be here in the winter, I am sure they let little
elfves out from somewhere and they run all over town, it must be just like the
North Pole. The people of Belgium
are fantastic, some of the nicest folks we have met on our whole trip.
Ghent or Gent (French Gand), city in western Belgium,
capital of East Flanders
Province, at the confluence of the Schelde (Escaut) and Lys rivers, near Brussels. The rivers and canals traversing the
city divide it into a number of small islands, which are connected by a network
of about 200 bridges. Two important ship canals connect Ghent's waterways with the sea. One canal connects
the Grand Basin
along the northern side of the city with the large harbor at Terneuzen, Netherlands,
on the Schelde; the other connects Ghent
with Brugge (Bruges)
and Oostende.
Because of these important sea outlets, Ghent is
one of the foremost trading and export centers in the North
Sea region. Although the city has decreased relatively in
industrial importance since the 15th century, when it was one of the chief
textile-producing centers in Europe, the
number of its manufacturing establishments is large. The principal commodities
produced include lace, woolens, leather, soap, paper, cotton and linen goods,
machinery, sugar, beer, and tobacco products. Horticulture, both in Ghent and in the
surrounding area, is a flourishing industry, with hundreds of establishments in
the city. Ghent
is the site of the flower shows called Floralies,
held every five years, which attract visitors from all over the world.
The most
important educational institution in the city is the University of Ghent
(1817). The city is also the site of a noted art gallery. The Begijnhof, or Béguinage, a small
walled town containing numerous small houses, 18 convents, and a church, is
situated in the suburbs of Saint Amandsberg. It is
inhabited by 700 members of the Beguines, a lay sisterhood devoted to
charitable work. The Cathedral of Saint Bavon, with a
crypt dating from 941, houses the celebrated Ghent Altarpiece (1432), painted
by the Flemish artists Hubert van Eyck and Jan van Eyck.
Ghent is
mentioned as early as the 7th century, and in the latter half of the 9th
century Baldwin I, count of Flanders, known as Bras de Fer
(French for “Iron Arm”), built a fortress in Ghent as a defense against the
coastal incursions of the Norse. The subsequent history of the city is closely
integrated with that of Flanders. Seized by France in 1792, Ghent
was made part of the Netherlands
in 1814. In 1830 it became part of independent Belgium. Ghent
has been a site for the signing of important treaties such as the Pacification
of Ghent, which united the Low Countries against Spanish rule in 1576, and the
Treaty of Ghent in 1814, which ended the War of 1812 between the United States and Britain. The city was occupied by
German forces during World War I (1914-1918) and for most of World War II
(1939-1945). Population (2001 estimate) 224,685
We started
and finished Belgium by
going through Brussels,
and I am glad we are not coming back to this city. Well, actually, we might
have to come back to get to London,
but we will try and stay away if we can. It is probably a beautiful city but
after you have been in Brugge and Gent,
nothing but the best will do. So I will only say that if you are coming to
Europe make sure you come to Belgium
because they are some of the nicest people in all of Europe.
If you do come you will most likely come into Brussels and you can judge for yourself, but
make sure you hang onto to you wallet!