Friday, April 12, 2013

Shopping Day-Friday in Rotterdam

Danny and I decided to play the metro tourist role-you know the ones who come to the city with the intention of shopping and dining. They do not try to disguise the trip as cultural or educational in any way. It is pure retail and eating! It was too foggy to go to Euromast, to cold and windy to tackle the Erasmus bridge, but never too rainy to sit in the Hema cafe on Coolsingelstraat and people watch and drink cappuccinos! We dashed in and out of many rain showers, only really caught two full on (you end up looking like you just showered with your clothes on!) and visited all our favourite Dutch shops. Hema, Zeeman, Blokker, C&A, Van Haren, The Croc shop, and window shopped at many more. Remember SissyBoy? We passed it! A mid afternoon frtte break was just what Danny needed. Then we went on to our comic book store and Danny happily spent his euros on an Asterix and Obelix comic book. We ended our afternoon at the NAI  (National Architecture Institute) which has one of our favourite cafes in Rotterdam. And the Cafe macchiatto was still excellent!
We met Jerry a few streets away at Bazaar, our favourite restaurant, and I had my usual, Falafel salad and sweet pepper curry soup-and it was maybe even better than I remembered!
We ended the evening with a trip to PrinzAlexandrium mall where I cleaned up at my favourite sport shop and then came back to the hotel. Jerry and I had a coffee and a beer respectively at the hotel lounge while Danny finished a social studies assignment. I was also able to chat with my sister by phone and Jerry with Hank, which was a great finish to a great day! Hup Holland Hup!
we always see the coolest cars!

the cube houses are one block from our hotel

cool public art- Danny resembles the guy now that he wears glasses!

A favourite comic character

"have you heard the one about the Dutchie....!"

Thanks Mom! now lets get out of the rain!

so good especially with loads of fritte sauce!

we even got our favourite table

shish-ka-bob

my soup, since Jerry ordered it as well, we got a whole tureen!

Traveling- Thursday in Vienna and Rotterdam

even though I'm sidewise I am so cute!! Last meal in Vienna-Torte of course!
Woke up feeling nauseous - - too many late night coffee and pastries en suite?!?!  Jerry and Danny headed down for one final fabulous Austrian breakfast, then trekked over to St. Michaelkirk, ironically the closest church in distance to us but one we had not been to.  A beautiful 'family' type of church, with different altars and alcoves sponsored by families of the area in the 16th and 17th centuries.  Meanwhile, I set about mentally talking myself into feeling better...you guys know what a good talker I am, so you will not be surprised to learn that I convinced myself I felt fine!  We checked out of the lovely hotel and left our bags with the concierge (yes, it was THAT kind of place), heading out for a last sunny stroll on Vienna's quaint and quirky cobblestone streets.  It was actually quite warm, and when we saw a corner table available outside of Aida we snagged it.  Danny had wanted to try the Mozart torte, and this was his chance.  Danny describes it as a 'rich, heavy chocolate cake, very smooth, very chocolatey icing, a chocolate medallion with Mozart's face embedded on it, and some green filling that could not make itself known over the chocolate.'  You just feel so European, crammed around a tiny table, cigarette smoke wafting around you, people from all over the world going by - - school field trips, Japanese business mean laden down with shopping bags, women in burkas, pensioners with walkers and small dogs -  ahhh, Life!!


Life is good!



the Mozart torte at Aida
oh yes, we're back!

IKEA!

At our park

our old friend Hofschein




Then off to the airport in our taxi, and on board our KLM to Amsterdam.  This plane was much larger than our flight in to Vienna, and with the clear skies Danny and I were able to see the Austrian countryside as we flew off.  Jer gets the aisle, he likes the leg room, and i take the middle cause I'm a good sport :)

We landed at Schipol in the gray misty fog - - you only know your landing when you hit the ground.  Welcome back to Holland, where the weather is still crappy!  Our car is a slick Nissan Juke; Ed Bedner would love it.  Jer hops behind the wheel and we zip out of the airport onto the A4 like natives.  We will pass by Pijnacker on the way to Rotterdam and Jerry suggests we stop there for dinner.  Then we remember there are no good places to eat in Pijnacker, and when we lived there we went out to eat.......where?  If you are a faithful reader you will know the answer.  That's right...IKEA - Delft!  So yes indeed, that is where we went.  And loved every meatball, slice of apple pie (Dutch National Food), and bottomless cappuccino dispenser.  We headed 'home' to Pijnacker, and crossed down the main street, past the Sport Institute, Blocker, Zeeman, the Turkish grocery, and all of our old haunts.  We actually went to Gaaghof 16 and parked, and took a gray, chilly walk around the obstacle course park.  Very nostalgic.  On our way out of town, we stopped at Albert Hein - - our supermarket.  Jerry was teasing me that we would need an extra suitcase for food, the way I was shopping!  But I miss it!  I miss shopping being a fun activity I did every day with the kids, not the solo drudgery it is back home.  Gingerbread!  Pindas!  Pure bliss!
The cool Nissan Juke!

At the entrance to our AH supermarkt!

Hotel Savoy Rotterdam is as well placed as it appeared on the map online, and the room is quite large.  I splurged and ordered up an extra bed for Danny, so it is very comfortable.  Jerry set to work, Detroit time, and Danny and I read...

Scaling new heights!-Wednesday in Vienna

Now even in a beautiful,museum and art filled city like Vienna there has to be some down time for a 12 year old boy, even one as interested in that stuff as Danny is. On our wanderings on Friday we had come across a climbing facility tucked into a little alley of a turn of the century street in the inner city and thought "cool"! So I decided that after Danny's phenomenal breakfast we would track it down and he could climb. It was easy enough to get to and we were able to get the gear right there (shoes required, helmet not!) Unfortunately I don't know a "beele on,on beele" from a weiner schnitzel, so he was confined to the free climbing walls. I was feeling bad when he told me that this was actually what he liked to do best, not the climbing with the ropes. Yay! So it was all good, in fact, awesome! I was in charge of moral support and photography, he was in charge of climbing. And climbing,and climbing and climbing! It was cool to watch him when he would fall off, study the holds, and get back on the wall, determined to make it past the tricky part, even if it took him 6-8 trys-determination, that's what I loved seeing! He climbed for three hours!! And in between photo's and hurrahs, I read my juicy,trashy British chick book. Talk about a Win-Win!











All that climbing burned off so many calories there was now room for a little more culture! We walked over to the Museumplein and we to the the Kunsthistorisches Museum which is housed in its festive palatial building on Ringstraße, crowned with an octagonal dome. It was opened around 1891 at the same time as the Naturhistorisches Museum, by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria-Hungary. The two museums have identical exteriors and face each other across Maria-Theresien-Platz. Both buildings were built between 1872 and 1891 according to plans drawn up by Gottfried Semper and Karl Freiherr von Hasenauer.
The two Ringstraße museums were commissioned by the Emperor in order to find a suitable shelter for the Habsburgs' formidable art collection and to make it accessible to the general public. The facade was built of sandstone. The building is rectangular in shape, and topped with a dome that is 60 meters high. The inside of the building is lavishly decorated with marble, stucco ornamentation, gold-leaf, and paintings. The idea was that all the important people who visited the Habsburgs would be impressed by not only the collections they had, but by the building itself. And boy did they succeed! The marble is breathtaking! The museum is large and we cruised through Egyptian sarcophagi,burial urns,paintings and figures, Greek and roman sculpture (with an interesting side exhibit on photocromology, the science of discovering that all those white statues used to be painted colours-who knew!), a traveling coin exhibit with coins from 320-present, and Dutch and Flemish paintings including Peter Paul Rubins, our old friend from Antwerp, and Rembrandt. ho hum! The best section was the Habsburg treasures. They dated from the 1500's until 1918, when the family lost their reign. We were stunned as room after room revealed jewelry and statues, bowls and figures, automatons and joke vases, everything encrusted with gold and jewels, precious gems, mother of pearl,carved from ivory, I mean, how can you even describe it in a blog? One cool thing was in the rooms with the automatons, they had tablets on benches along the sides of the room, and you good view small,gorgeous movies made of the automatons actually running! One of our favs was a galleon with chained prisoners at the oars, and they would row as the boat traveled down the length of the table, with crew men moving, sails billowing,etc. all done by the intricate clockworks housed inside. Another cool one was a tower/pagoda, with figures that danced and spun, and right at the end, a door pooped open and a little man popped out, facing backwards, and dropped his trousers! Couldn't you just hear the laughter of the Emperor and his bawdy pals at this one!
We closed the place down at 6pm.and headed to Vapiano, and little bistro across from our hotel. They give each diner a card and then you go to whichever counter you'd like and order up pasta,salads,pizzas baked to order,bar drinks(of course,we're in Europe!) coffees and desserts. Then you just lounge around as long as you want! Danny and I played Phase 10 and chilled like locals!
Egyptian area

very rare Egyptian artifact-can't remember when it's from!




Danny liked the bling!

main entrance staircase


hard to see, but Mary is holding a sleeping one year old Jesus, loving mother, so beautiful!

this is an ore nugget, that was then carved and added onto with scenes of mining and religion-together



how are these objects for demonstrating your wealth?!


this is about 4 inches long, it was for holding smelling salts!


mathematical instruments and clocks were big collections and fascinated the people at that time, all gold of course

an automaton



inside of the dome


art galleries that we literally shot through there was so much....


in the Imperial palace complex, having fun!

sun and clouds at 6:30pm



living like a local :)