Sep 132012
 

We spent the last weekend, actually a 4 day weekend, on Vlieland, the second of the chain of islands at the top end of the Netherlands.  This last weekend was the Into The Great Wide Open festival.

We drove to Harlingen, over the Afsluitdijk.

We took a boat across the Waddenzee to Vlieland.

We set up our tent at Lange Paal campground.

Luckily there are small trucks that carry all your stuff from Harlingen to the campground.  You are not allowed to take a car onto the island and everyone rents bikes to get around the island.  Here’s what camping looks like on Vlieland.

After we got our tent set up we hopped on our bikes and headed to the festival grounds.  Just like everyone else!

The festival officially started Friday afternoon, which is when we got there, but we heard that there were some unofficial, impromptu, gatherings and performances on Thursday night when people started to arrive.

There are 3 main areas where bands/musicians are playing, plus other areas where you can find art and activities (especially for kids).  The sports field is where the main stage was located, along with loads of food stands and a tiny ferris wheel and merchandise sales (very minimal).  A short walk from there was the Buiten (outside) stage which was set in the woods and was cozy and small.  Then, a bike ride away, up the hill near the lighthouse, was another small stage, the Vuurbuitsduin.

Here are a few of my favorite photos from the weekend:

Whole pigs being roasted on a spit:

Kids running around collecting glasses.  They got 1 munt (2.50 euros) for every 20 glasses they returned.  The glasses were washed and reused all weekend.  These kids were tenacious!

It’s definitely a kid-friendly festival.  There were lots of things for them to do (besides collect glasses), such as “make your own poffertjes” (little pancakes).  There was also a place for them to make their own pizza.

Friday night we walked down to the beach.

And watched the sun set.

There was an art event on the beach earlier, but we missed it.  I did get a really nice photo of the piano though.

I love that photo!  It reminds me of Neil Young’s “On The Beach”.

We also went to the Vuurboetsduin stage late Friday night.  We didn’t like the music, but the stage and the setting was super.

Saturday afternoon was also spent on the hill, now in brilliant sunshine.

By the time Adrian Young took the stage, the place was packed.  Adrian and his band were great, and the band stay around after their set and mingled with the crowd, signing records and chatting.  It’s that kind of festival.

Back at the sport field and the main stage, things were heating up (or “hotting up” as the English say), with Alt-J:

And Balthazar (we are big fans of Balthazar):

And sake tasting (3 glasses per tasting with a nice explanation from the seller about each type of sake):

This photo was taken Sunday morning, at the Buiten stage, around 11:00 in the morning.  It was beautiful, sunny, in the trees, sitting on the forest floor drinking coffee and listening to interviews and music.  I can’t think of a better way to spend a Sunday morning!

Anne Soldaat being interviewed.  He sang for us afterwards.

Back to the main stage late in the afternoon and Dio was whipping the crowd into a frenzy.

Now there were turkeys on the spit:

And the sun was still shining.  How lucky were we!

Oh! I forgot to mention that we also spent some time hanging out in the sun on the dike that runs along the south side of the island.

You could see tall ships off in the distance.

And walking down from the lighthouse you could see the boats stuck in the mud of low tide.

The festival ended Sunday early evening and we made it an early evening ourselves.  I think we were laying in our sleeping bags before 10:00pm!  We were beat.  Monday morning we broke camp and loaded our stuff into the truck at the campground (after a last minute panicked search for bike lock keys stuffed into a backpack already loaded onto the truck! ok- my fault) and biked back to the harbor.  We returned the bikes and waited in the drizzling weather for our boat.  Somehow the weather had been beautiful all weekend and then started to rain the minute we left.  Talk about timing.

I haven’t talked much about music in this blog post, and music is the whole point of this festival.  Clearly from  my photos I think it’s about a whole lot more than the music!

My highlights of the weekend:  the weather, Vlieland itself – GORGEOUS, Sunday morning music and forest setting, and the great company (DB, K & P) and the festival organization in general – oh and real flush toilets!  Food highlights: Vietnamese, apple tarts, roasted pig and sake tasting. Music highlights: Janne Schra, Balthazar, Alt-J, Dirty Beaches (a little story about THAT coming up).  The negatives? Hmmm, hard to find negatives.  The food we had Sunday (old chicken and corn that wasn’t edible). That’s about it.

The festival is limited to 5,000 tickets and they plan to keep it that way.  We were lucky to get tickets.  You can only buy them online, starting at a certain date and time and they sold out within minutes.  Having a festival on Vlieland forces them to keep it small.  The island can only accommodate 8,000 people in total, including people who live there year round (about 1,100).  I really hope we can score tickets again next year.  I wouldn’t miss it!

OK, the story about Dirty Beaches.  They (a 3 person band) were playing at the small (tiny) stage across the field from the main stage.  They are from Toronto.  They play loud grating music that isn’t to everyone’s taste.  The singer looked like an Eskimo and seemed just a little crazy.  At the end of the short set he jumped off the stage and ran around hugging people in a manic fashion.  He wrapped one arm around DB and another arm around someone else and dragged them back and forth through the crowd.  Someone shouted “til hem op!” (lift him up) and they crowd surfed him around.  Finally he came to the ground and ended the set on stage.  It was during that meelee that DB’s sunglasses went flying, never to be seen again.  His good sunglasses that he bought in Chico.  Oh well.  It was funny and fun and we are now fans.

Here is a flickr set of my photos from the weekend.  I could really write up a story about each photo, but it would be too long and become boring.  You had to be there.

Sep 022012
 

Yesterday afternoon I convinced DB to get up off the couch and go for a walk.  We’d been hanging out at home all day, sitting in the (suddenly Autumn) sun, sitting on the couch.  I had to get up and move!

I took my camera and we walked down the street to the sloot that takes off from the Spaarne.  I knew that the black swans are there most of the time.  I was lucky and there they were.

There are three of them that live in this area.  There is another pair that used to also hang around this part of Haarlem, but they’ve moved off to somewhere else – I think along the Spaarne itself.

Just to throw in another photo, here’s the little pumpkin I’ve been growing in the front of the house.

I can’t believe I spent 10 euros on this plant!  Of course it held the promise of many more pumpkins.  There were lots of flowers on it in early July.  But the flowers fell off and the only thing left was this one pumpkin.

Yesterday I picked him.  It hadn’t changed in size in a few weeks and the plant itself was starting to die off.  I was also afraid that someone would take it out of the garden in the middle of the night.  It wouldn’t be the first time.  Earlier this year someone took a strawberry plant, which was in a pot and had lots of fruit on it, out of the garden in the middle of the night.  A few years ago someone took a large flowering plant out of the ground!  And this is a good neighborhood.  It’s just a busy neighborhood  with lots of people biking past.

Anyway, he will become soup.

Summer is over.  The blackberries are finished and now the pumpkin is picked.  Almost time to get the winter sweaters out again!

Jun 172012
 

This morning at 8am we went to the Chico Farmers Market. It was already pretty warm outside!
I bought veggies I can’t get in Holland: 3 kinds of squash and purple carrots.
I bought organic blueberries and feta cheese.
I bought cheese from my sister and gave her a hug. I don’t know who was more surprised, her or me.

20120616-175727.jpg

Jun 132012
 

We’ve headed north and are now staying with J. And M. in Chico.  They live in a house with a huge garden. The weather is hot and sunny. Today we rented bikes and biked for an hour in a park and around Chico. (at this moment we’re watching NL get badly beat by DE in Euro12; pathetic)
Huge garden
We brought J. a birthday present from home: 12 Dutch beers. I think he likes it.
J & M and beer
Tonight we’re going to Sierra Nevada brewery for a tour and dinner. Can’t wait! I also have photos from my birthday dinner Monday night, but they aren’t on Flickr yet. It’s not as easy to get all this organized with only an iPad, so I might show those later when we get home – a kind of food round up.

I plan to make it to the local yarn shop, Heartstrings Yarns, this week still. It’s a really big shop with a huge selection. Their web site is a bit sad, and is no reflection of the shop itself. I’ll let you know what I score!

May 242012
 

The weather was really warm today.  The high temp was 24C/75F.  Coming from California this doesn’t sound very hot.  But in NL this is a very impressive warm temp.  I’m happy it wasn’t hotter!

In the morning we went for a (short) run.  Mine was short anyway.  Then we got busy in the garden while it was still cool.  Plants were planted and other plants were dug up and thrown out.  We aren’t done yet so no “after” photos yet.

For dinner we decided to BBQ.  Throwing a couple of steaks on the barby is so quick to do and eating them outside makes it even more special.  Above are the steaks, baked sweet potatoes and a salad.  Simple but Yum.  I don’t see the point in making a big fuss of BBQ-ing with sauces and lots of meat.  Just keep it simple and tasty and that’s all you need.

Tomorrow both DB and I have job interviews.  Wish us luck!

Dec 302011
 

I hope everyone is having a nice holiday season.  Me?  I’m cooking and eating a lot.  And not running so much.  You know what that means…. it means I’ll have to start running a lot to get rid of this extra holiday flab.  Same story all over the western world I think.  We eat and relax and eat again!

Above is a photo of my chocolate and vanilla tart, with chocolate leaves.  Doesn’t that look pretty?  It was pretty tasty too.  On Christmas Eve we met with a group of friends, 16 of us in total, and each household had to bring a course.  We, as usual, bring dessert.  I made the above tart and a carrot cake.  I’m especially proud of the chocolate leaves, although actually it’s dead easy to do.  Melt some high quality Swiss dark chocolate (70% or more).  Go outside and get some small leaves that are still in good shape.  We have a Wisteria out back which sheds leaves much later than other trees so there are still a lot of green leaves on the ground.  Gently brush chocolate on the BACK of the leaves and put them in the fridge for 10 minutes or more.  Then paint on a second coat and chill again.  Be careful not to get chocolate on the front of the leaf.  When it is hard and cold carefully peel the leaf off and voila! Chocolate leaves.

I have a load of food photos from the past week.  I took photos of food we ate in Cologne (we were there for 2 days), food at Christmas, and just food everywhere.  I forgot to take photos of the Swiss dinner we hosted two nights ago.  DB’s family came over and we had cheese fondue and raclette and we kept to the traditions of those foods.  Thank goodness no one insisted in putting broccoli in the cheese fondue.

Here are some food photos from the past week:

Now I’ve made myself hungry.  I’m off to the kitchen….