History
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This year I have decided to combine our two trips in one report, so these are pictures from Holland in April and the Meddo Show. Pascal asked if we had a good time in April and the answer is a resounding YES! The only disappointment was I was promised a six cylinder Super Major would meet us on Museum Plain but it did not! This year we brought my brother and sister-in-law, Rod and Angela, for their first visit. It was really only a long weekend but we take every chance we can. Angela was very worried about the sea crossing, having never sailed on a big ferry before but the Stenar Line ships are great and you hardly know you are sailing. She went to sleep in the cabin and woke in Holland. We drove to Amsterdam and did our usual visit to the Museums and a canal trip. Rod was a little put out with the pictures and models in the Reich Museum showing how the Dutch defeated the English in their trade wars! (Only joking). The wonderful fried egg sandwich we had in a bar opposite the Central Station soon brought him round though. Four fried eggs on ham, cheese, pineapple toast and salad! When we arrived in Harlingen on Saturday morning they must have been expecting us. All the ships in the harbour were decked in flags. And there was a Marching band! # On the quay there was a group singing sea shanties. They sang them in Dutch but Rod and I harmonised in English. They were the same songs as we learnt at school! There were also interesting displays of old outboard motors. In another branch of the canal were about twenty very luxurious motor cruisers built in the local boat yards. Our host told us they cost up to one million Euros per square metre! All these celebrations were not for our visit, it seems we had arrived on the opening day of the sailing season. We spent the rest of the day looking around the wonderful planetarium at Franecker and the Stadt House and gardens. Monday saw us heading through fields of hyacinths in full bloom for our annual visit to the Kukenhof. Rod and Angela were struck dumb by the wonderful display of so many varieties of tulips and orchids. My brother had to have his picture taken wearing clogs. Art in the gardens Our next trip was to the Veluwe National Park and the Meddo Show. After Emiel's invitation, we decided to take Dotty to the show and Pascal decided to drive his Super Major Symphony from Amsterdam to Meddo, an epic trip. Dotty arrives at Emiel's family farm. She will be getting big headed if she keeps getting all this attention. After a cup of tea, we unhitch and set off for our first hotel at Nijmegen. We always visit Nijmegen when we come to this part of Holland, its a pilgrimage on behalf of my father. During WW2 he served with the 2nd Tactical Air Force and was in the column which was stopped on the way to relieve Arnhem. They eventually were transferred to an airfield close to Nijmegen and was involved with the Canadian forces. We have always taken pictures of the area, when we passed through and he would pore over them with relish. Oh! Noticed this whilst walking around the town. Can this be one of Jos's ancestors? There was a rock music festival setting up in the town and we really enjoyed the bands who were practising as we walked passed. Takes me back to my twenties! One of the houses near our hotel. On Monday morning we left the hotel and made our way to the next, deep in the National Park. Ann directed us towards our hotel via Oosterbeek and the Arnhem Museum there. Very moving, especially when our route took us passed the War Cemeteries. I did find a tractor in the museum! Our hotel! Rather special! This is the restaurant and bar area, the rooms are in small apartments scattered through the woods. The view from our apartment window. So quiet and peaceful. Beekbergen Station and engine collection. These next three pictures are for Steven B who has a thing about cranes, Westinghouse and railways!! Even Dutch engines have orange bits! The Vellue. Brian on a bike!!!!! The Koeller-Muller Museum exhibits the bits Pascal had leftover after building Symphony! Moving art! Very very interesting. We thought this arrangement of stones very clever. When viewed from different directions. The hunting lodge. Then its is time to go to Meddo, once again we go to meet Emiel and his father, hitch up to Dotty again and head off for the show ground. Pascal has been keeping in contact as he drove from Amsterdam so we know that Dotty will not be needed to tow him. I have to change a wheel on the trailer though. Picked up a nail somewhere. We set off. We follow Emiel. What a skilled driver! He had to weave in and out of parked cars, in narrow streets and then around roundabouts and tractor roads. But we got there with only one rubber post knocked down! Dotty touches Dutch soil. Pascal looks on. Has anyone seen the showground? Emiel unloads his E1ADKN. The gang are all together! Pascal greets us as we drive onto the show ground then we all drive, in formation, to the stand. Ann drives Dotty, Emiel the E27N, Pascal the diesel Dexta and me on the petrol/paraffin E1ADN. Would have been a great picture but we all had tractors. It seemed very stange driving Emiel's Major after Henrietta, all the noise seemed in the wrong place with the underslung exhaust. But she drives beautifully. The weather was not great for the Meddo days, it was grey and cloudy and very cold on the first day, but we found time to talk and have a bit of fun. Oscar and Sander joined us, it was the first time Oscar had seen a petrol Dexta. The Symphony comes under scrutiny. Later in the day Dotty showed her raw power(!) as she dragged the Symphony out of the line for a photo shoot! And got Emiel's Mercedes out of a sticky spot! Bit close there for a second! All in good fun. As usual, Meddo has a vast number of unusual and strange tractors. BM-Volvo Same Small Hanomag Little Lanz. Bucket rain cap was extra! A lovely show of a range of Austrian Steyr tractors. One for Eva, Pascal? Christmas is coming! A Deutz tool carrier and drill Or perhaps this is Eva's present from Pascal. John Deere Lanz combine Guldner A milking machine display. Equal wheeled four wheel drive and pivot steer by Holder. Norwegian Danhokse tractor. Two East German tractors. Henk thinks the top one is a Fortschritt ZT300 and I would agree with him. It looks a lot like a Zetor Chrystal and the big Ursus of the 1970's. We had the combines from the same factory, here in England. They were a simple basic machine, similar to the Claas of the time. The importers also sold East German beet harvesters and manure spreaders. The second tractor is an IFA says Henk. They both sounded nice when they drove from the showground on Sunday afternoon. Baby IH. Dutch Dextas. (NO COMMENT). Ursus An Oliver. Volvo-BM All too soon it was time to load up and make our way back home or to the hotel. Rover, Dotty,Symphony and Pascal's lunchbox fill the hotel car park. On Monday, we say our goodbyes as Pascal sets off for home and we head off for The Hook a little later. We take our time and arrive at the Maasluice Ferry to watch some ships before crossing. We arrive at The Hook in the late afternoon and drive down to the Strand for a coffee. The lifeboat museum at The Hook. Sea views at The Hook. It was whilst we were watching the boats here that we had a very unsettling experience. We walked down the sea side path enjoying the view when we were joined by a strange young man in cycling lycra. He followed us very closely indeed as we walked and when we turned back he walked within half a metre at our back. We moved aside to let him pass but he stopped when we did and did not attempt to pass us. At the top of the path, he had left his bike, we went into a small coffee stall and he eventually passed but was waiting when we came out, adjusting his bike. It was then I noticed the knife tucked down the back of his shorts. It could have been an innocent encounter but we hurried to our favorite fish and chip stall on the dock side where there were more people around us.
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