Thursday, August 27, 2009

Cologne

On our way back to Germany from Brussels, I fell asleep. I know that surprises all of you. :) Sometime during the drive, Steve pats my leg and says "Hey! We just entered the Netherlands." I think I said something like "cool." Then I fell back to sleep. If I was more coherent I would have taken a picture. That is what I get for sleeping. But that did make our count to 8 countries that we have been in during our time here. WOW! That is a lot of countries. I don't think either one of us had ever thought that we would travel to 8 different countries.

Anyway, we drove through the Netherlands to Cologne, Germany. Like I said before, there was supposedly a really cool chocolate factory here. As we drove in to the city, we were surprised at how pretty it was. (I don't know why we keep getting surprised over this. EVERYTHING is just beautiful here!)

We found a parking place and walk to the Schokoladen Museum.
Please ignore my face in this picture. I was tickling Josh trying to get him to smile and Steve took the picture before I was ready.

We were hoping this was going to be similar to chocolate factory in Broc. Zack had a really good time there. But this was more of a museum. It had a lot about cocoa beans and how they are harvested. They had movies of people cutting down cocoa bean trees. There was a lot to read and look at, which is not what a 2 year old wants to do. So we moved quickly through this part. There was one display about how chocolate is actually healthy for you. It had all sorts of reason why we should eat chocolate and how it effected the different parts of our body. But I am still wondering how healthy it really is. Why are my pants a little tighter after all the chocolate and chocolate waffles this weekend? Oh, I know, it must have been the fries!

The center part did have really cool machine making chocolate. We could go right up to them and look in. Zack liked running around and going up all the stairs to look at the chocolate.

This is the machine filling in chocolate molds.

This machine is making hollow molded chocolate. You know, like those hollow bunnies we can buy at Easter time. It was a really cool machine. The arms were moving constantly and in every direction. I never knew how they did this.
Very cool to see!

There was a model cocoa bean tree with chocolate running out the bottom. They dipped little waffle pieces in it and handed it out for a sample.Look at Josh eying Zack's chocolate. Lately, we have noticed how much Josh notices what Zack gets and he doesn't. We did give him a piece without chocolate. The chocolate was dripping all over, so we didn't want a mess. But he obviously knew the difference.

We finished up at the museum. It was a neat place, but we did like the Broc factory better. Zack liked this one a lot. He did not want to leave until we saw Willy Wonka. Some how we talked him in to leaving with out too much hassle.

On the way back to our car, Zack saw a little Merry-Go-Round with cars on it. Since t was only 1 euro, we let him ride. Every time he would circle back towards us, Josh would wave and say hi and Zack would wave back at him. It was the cutest thing.


These two can be each others best friends or each others worse enemies. I really like it when they play together. They can both giggle at each other for quite some time. I just love it!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Brussels

We arrived to Brussels at about 6:00 PM. There are two parts of Brussels: the Upper Town-which has big marble palaces and broad boulevards, and the Lower Town-which has old building and narrow streets. Since it was still relatively early we decided to tour the Upper Town.

We started in the Parc de Bruxelles. There was some carnival going on so we didn't go through the middle. We walked around the outside. It was a very pretty park.
Across the street from the park is the Belgium Parliment building.

The Royal Palace is on the other side of the park. This is the office of the King of Belgium. If the flag is flying from the palace, the king is somewhere in Belgium. There was no flag. So we had no chance of running in to him. I am sure we would have recognized him. :)

From here we walked pass the Place Royale. This is just a really fancy church. They do rent out part of it for other uses. But we couldn't figure out what those were.

Next we ran into the Notre-Dame du Sablon Church. This church is known for a little statue of Mary dressed in white with a lace veil. This statue has powers that saved Brussels many times. Unfortunately it was closed by the time we got there. Then it had mass on Sunday. So we didn't get to see the statue.

Across from the church was a little garden. It was really pretty. I think Zack is starting to like the attention he gets from getting his picture taken. He also liked being out of the stroller for a while. He was running all over the garden. We were glad it wasn't too crowded. There was a nice little fountain. Zack, of course, wanted to touch the water-no we didn't let him.

There was a really good view of the church. These old churches have quite the architecture. Who knows what Zack is doing...but he is smiling.

Down the street is the under construction Palace of Justice. This was built in the 1800s. It is still used as a Hall of Justice where big court cases appear.
We really like the golden top of the dome. Very classy looking.

On the side of the Palace is a great viewpoint to see all of Brussels. It was a great view. Zack again loved walking all over.

We returned to our hotel for a good nights rest. Then headed out in the morning to tour the Lower Town. We started in the Grand Place. This is the center of Brussels. This square was filled with chocolate shops, waffles, cafes, lace and flowers. The first thing everyone sees in the Town Hall. It is massive! It is pretty impressive. The building were all topped with statues. They were all pretty cool looking. We checked out the inside of the town hall. The outside is definitely the better part.

We thought it was funny to see this Australian Ice Cream shop right in the middle of Brussels. I didn't know Australia had good ice cream. But apparently it is good enough to be sold in Brussels next to Italian ice cream.

Every time Zack see any kind of sculpture of an animal. He has to stand by it and smile while we take his picture. Then we has to feed it out of his hands and of course pet it. He was very excited to see this elephant.
We were excited to see the Chocopolis behind the elephant. We went inside to check it out. They gave each of us a free sample, even a whole one for Josh. He really liked that.

Next we walked down the street to the Galeries Royales St. Hubert. This is Europe's oldest still-operating shopping mall. It was glassed covered. It had stores that made custom hats and canes. There was a store to make shoes custom to your foot. They all made them right there in the store. It was a pretty neat mall.

Next we walked down the Rue des Bouchers. I have never seen so many restaurants in one place. This is all this street had. It was amazing how many tables were squished into such a little area. Plus it seemed like they all sold the same thing: Mussels. We just could not get ourselves to eat Mussels in Brussels. We are not fish eaters and we just could not do it.

The Church of St. Nicolas was our next stop. It was a smaller church than we had been seeing. But, as always, very beautiful inside. It is always interesting to see the different statues of people and all the candles under them. It was interesting to see that the candle and match cost. You want to ask for a blessing, please pay here.

On our walk to the highlight of Brussels: Manneken-Pis. We passed this. This is a statue of the Mayor of Brussels who would not surrender the keys of the city to invaders. So we was tortured and killed. The legend is if you touch him, you will get good luck. So of course I had to touch him.

We finally got to the Manneken-Pis:


Originally, in 1619, this was made to provide drinking water to the neighborhood. Now it is the pride of Brussels. We had to run just to get a picture with it.

It is really funny how proud this city is of this little guy. He is made out of chocolate, metal, lace, you name it and they have it. It really made me smile to see these in almost every chocolate shop we passed. Zack kept asking "What is that?" I'm not sure he quite understands.

Of course, we had some more waffles and fries before heading out of the country. We really, really liked Belgium. It made the list of where we want to come back to someday. The buildings were amazing. We think it is a very classy country (well, to visit, at least.)

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Belgium- Day 1: Bruges

Last week Steve had to work late, so he was able to get off at 1:30 on Friday. We were so excited! We were going to take the opportunity to see a few more things. The plan was to drive to Cologne, Germany. Go to the Chocolate Factory/museum and see a couple more things and then drive to Bruges, Belgium where we were spending the night. The drive to Cologne was supposed to be 3 hours then it was another 3 and a half hours to Bruges. We could be at our hotel before 10! We had to be at the factory by 5:00. We put the address into our wonderful GPS. It was estimating that we would get there at 5:30 because of our favorite things in the world, staus (traffic jams). So the factory was out of the question. We changed our game plan. We were going to stop in Trier, Germany to see some Roman ruins and then to Luxembourg, Luxembourg (how many of you have heard of that country before?) to see Gen. Patton's grave. So we headed off to Trier. We got there and looked and looked for these Roman ruins. We thought they would be in the GPS or that there would be signs. But we couldn't find them at all. We did drive on a really cool bridge that looked really old. But we never found any sites. Here is our proof that we went to Trier.

We continued on. Can you tell how thrilled Steve is about driving? We might be getting a little tired of these 6 hour drives. But they have all been well worth it!

We got to General Patton's grave at 6:10. It closes at 6:00...opps forgot to look that up. It looked like it would have been a site to see.

So onto Bruges. I guess that extra time didn't help after all. We still didn't arrive at our hotel until after 10. Plus they didn't understand that we had kids with us. So they had to set up the cribs. Steve and I finally got to bed a little after midnight. We just can't have a great weekend if we go to bed early!

We woke up bright and early, thanks to 2 darling little boys, and started our exploration of Bruges. Bruges was a very beautiful town. In the 14th century it was one of biggest towns in the world. Most of the buildings are well preserved neo-Gothic style, which I fell in love with. I love the look of the roofs, the stair like arches. Loved it!

We started out at the Market Square. The old canal came up to this square. All the farmers would ship their goods here to be made into a final product that would then we shipped out. Today it is filled with restaurants and old buildings. The statue behind us honors their victory over France in 1302.

The main attraction in Market Square is the Bell Tower.
This has stood over the square since 1300. It's bells rung every 15 minutes. We tried to climb the 366 steps to the top, but after 15 minutes of standing in a line that wasn't moving, our boys were done. So we moved on. This is us at the bottom of the tower.

We walked down Breidelstratt. This street was darling. Homemade lace, tapestry, chocolate and waffles are all sold on this street. These shops just lined the street. Each had there own little touch to call their own and make theirs better than the rest. The lace shops were amazing. I loved the little white lace dresses they had for baby girls. They had the shoes and hats to match. The outfit would have been so wonderful to bless a baby in. But I couldn't spend that type of money on a dress that would be worn once or even a dress that would have been wore a ton. They were pricey!

Of course, we had to stop at a chocolate shop. Belgium doesn't have a big chocolate company; it has lots of little family run chocolate shops. From the first bite, we decided that this is the BEST chocolate we have ever had. It is the essence of melt in you mouth. Look at Josh's face...he is concentrating on not letting that leave his mouth. YUMMY! The only bad thing about it is that it is not individually wrapped so it makes transportation hard. We are not sure it will last the 3 weeks until we come home. We will see if it makes it.

At the end of that street is the Burg Square. This square alone has 6 centuries of architecture. This square had a lot to look at. The first thing we saw was a group of people with coolers and some sort of alcohol. Most were dressed nice. THey were celebrating in front of the town hall. We are assuming that a couple just got married. Our Rick Steve's book says it happens a lot. This is me checking out the inside of the Town Hall.

The next stop was the Basilica of the Holy Blood. Here is the Legend of the Holy Blood: Several drops of Christ's blood were preserved in a crystal phial in Jerusalem. In 1150, the patriarch of Jerusalem gave the blood to a Flemish soldier as a thank you for rescuing his city from the Muslims. This soldier returned home and donated it to the city. It is now held in this Basilica for people to come and see. We were pretty excited about seeing this. It sounds like a cool idea. We went inside the church. It was amazing! There were painting depicting the story of how the blood got here. Though 3 huge arches was the phial. The phial was being watched over by 3 priests of some sort. There was a line to get to the phial. We sat and watched everyone go up to the phial and cross themselves and worship the phial. It was interesting to see how many people were really worshiping this phial. Since there were silence signs all over and our boys weren't being that silent, and since we really weren't there to worship the thing, we decided it was best to leave. It was a really neat basilica.

On the corner of Burg Square is the Crowne Plaza Hotel. This is one of the cities newest buildings. It sits atop the ruins of the town's oldest structures. We had to go inside and ask the receptionist very nicely if we could see the ruins in the basement. We must look like nice people because he let us go and see. The basement is lined with an old stone wall.

These are oak piling that held up the moat to the city.


They also found a town water hole which turned up a lot of ruins that they put back together. These were pretty neat.

Can you believe this is all in the bottom of a hotel? We were so glad to have Rick Steve's book so we knew about this. Most people just walked right past this hotel.

Next we had to have some Belgium fries. This is where fries were really started. I don't know how they got the name French Fries. These were by far the best fries we have ever had. I don't know what they do differently, but they were dang good!

While we were eating fried, Zack found a little metal model of the Bell Tower. he thought it was neat. He kept going and looking at it and touching it. He was fascinated.

We continued checking out the city. We found the original iron hinge from the city's gate. It use to close up at 10:00 PM.

Then we came upon an amazing view of the bell tower with the canal and some other old buildings. It was a perfect spot for a great family photo. You know, one that can go on the Christmas card. This is what we got:
Lovely, huh? Josh pulling his funny face and Zack way more interested in his fingernail than the stranger taking our picture.

It was getting time to try a Belgium Waffle. The Belgium eat waffles as a dessert or as a snack with their tea. They are much different than the ones we have for breakfast. They have some sort of sugar coat on them. I don't know if they put sugar in the iron or what they do. It is like sugar cooked into them. Then they have a million different toppings: strawberries, hot chocolate, nutella, caramel, whip cream, bananas, and any combination you can come up with. So here is us with our lunch:

Do you think Zack is excited? Chocolate for lunch...I'm a great mom.

Next stop was the "Church of Our Lady." This had a huge steeple, but it was under construction. So the picture isn't as cool as it could be, so you don't get one. Just a pic of the front. This church is famous for having one of the few Michelangelo statues to leave Italy during his lifetime. The statue is "Madonna and Child." It is Mary with young Jesus standing in front of her. Needless to say, it was amazing!

We were also amazed at how much the Catholics worship Jesus on the cross. There is nothing about the resurrection or anything of what happened before the cross. All three of these events are what gives us the opportunity to live forever. It made us realize how lucky we are to have the true gospel of Jesus Christ in our lives.

Next we ran into the Minnewater. This is just a very peaceful lake. It was nice to sit a relax for a while.

From here, we walked around and enjoyed the town a little more. We really liked this place. It was relaxing and beautiful. The buildings were amazing. When we were done, we headed to Brussels to check out the country's capital.

Here is a slide show of some more Bruges pics just to help you get a better feel of what it was like. We loved it there!