Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts

Friday, July 14, 2017

Riding today in tribute to Cliff and Ann Hale

July 14, 2017 - Today I'm riding in tribute to:

As I wrap up this year's Amazing Ride for Alzheimer's, I'd like to thank all of those that contributed to the ride in honor of a loved one. 

Your memorials motivate me on the road and I'm honored by your support for both the ride as well as memory care programs at Cedar Community.

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Golden earring = burial insurance


June 30, 2017 - Katwijk, Netherlands - Tried to get to several communities today just to get some miles under my belt. 

While the maps are great and very detailed, my cartography skills leave a bit to be desired. 

I'm getting better, but I said that yesterday, too.

Left Leiden around 7 a.m. and pedaled east to Wassenaar. Stopped for some coffee and fuel and at the grocery you had to get your own personal scanner. You scan everything you buy at the checkout, then you hand it to the checkout clerk and she tells you your total (photo below). 

It was odd, but genius. Just wait America!  
That handy scanner that will soon be coming to a grocery near you. 

Wound my way around the countryside and made it to the seaside community of Katwijk.
The boardwalk along the sea in Katwijk 

Pedaling through the dunes as I head south from Katwijk to De Hague. 
Stopped at the Katwijk Museum which features displays of a coastal town. There were paintings and photos featuring fishermen with their ships and the families left behind. 





A couple of interesting tidbits:

·        Families of up to a dozen lived in small quarters equivalent to about the size of an entryway in the US. In the corner of the room was a baby's high chair with a rag on it. The docent said the rag was soaked in brandy to keep the baby quiet.  
· 
·        Fishermen wore a golden earring. This was a sort of burial insurance. If their body washed up on shore then the ring would pay for a decent burial. 
·      
·
·         Katwijk was a two-community village made up of fishermen and farmers. 


·         There was an authentic shop of manufactured textile goods. There were different types of undergarments, including a knitted corset, which would be put on in September and then put back in the closet in early May. 
That's an "old-timey" bra in the forefront.


Unique beers in Holland. This one reminded me of Snow White.

My cabin tonight in De Hague. Full day of museums tomorrow including a torture museum and a clinic where they studied people who recently died to see if they weren't really dead.  The clinic has since closed. Shocker. 




Come along and tour the windmill with me!

June 29, 2017 - Leiden, Netherlands - For those of you who have never seen the inside of a bonafide Dutch windmill, I've shot some video to take you along on a tour with me. Click the video below and join me!

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

PHOTO GALLERY: Knocking Holland windmill off bucket list

June 29, 2017 - Leiden, Holland - I can knock Holland windmill tour off my bucket list.  
Then (above)...and NOW



The De Valk, or The Falcon, is a tower mill that dates to 1743.  It is seven floors in all and used to be home to the miller’s family and even a cow or two. 

Suggestions on how to get down. The docent said kids do the best but parents are scared. 
 The upscale living quarters on the first floor of the De Valk mill. 




The decorative sink in the kitchen inside the mill.

Wooden gears and wheels and whatnot near the ceiling on the fifth floor of the windmill. 

Looking up the narrow ladder stairs. 

The wheel on the outside to turn the sails on the windmill 



The grinding stones were enormous, the stairways or ladders steep and the life of a miller had to be difficult and very demanding and all while "wearing wooden shoes," said the docent Danielle at the front desk. 

A couple interesting tidbits: 

- The De Valk mill was pulled down in 1743 and replaced by the present tower mill; this time the body of the mill was built in brick.  A stone tablet shows the undertaking was completed in 2-1/2 months. 

-Over a century ago there were 10,000 windmills and now only 950. Most mills were lost in fires or they closed due to poor maintenance.  

The millers in Leiden were organized in the Guild of Saint Victor. In the Netherlands Saint Victor is regarded as the patron saint of millers. He was a Roman soldier, who as a Christian and refused to sacrifice to a pagan Roman god. His punishment was to be drowned with a millstone around his neck.

- The steam engine came into use in the 19th century and windmills were no longer necessary. They gradually disappeared from the city. Since 1950 only one mill has survived and this is De Valk (The Falcon). 
                                                                                       
-A millers fee was fixed by the authorities until 1805 when a tax had to be paid on every bag of grain. A tax inspector stood by the entrance to some mills; nevertheless, many millers managed to evade the regulations. Up until 1869 there were even 'smugglers cupboards' in De Valk in which the miller hid untaxed flour.


-Windmills were once saw mills that helped the ship building industry; the Dutch had one of the best fleets. 

Windmill art. Used to sell products.

Looking out on the city of Leiden from the fourth story

Weights used to hoist the grain up to the top level. The windmill did all the heavy lifting. 

A pulley and one of the old signs at the mill

The super secret bathroom on the first floor of the mill. 
The toilet paper was crisp and faded brown and looked original. The docent said the main bathroom was on the same floor as the cattle. So, not only did the family live in the windmill and operate it as a place of business to produce flour but it also housed a cow or two.

If a part broke in the windmill there was a person in town who could craft a new one. 
This was the directory hanging on the wall in the entryway 

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Off to work today in Holland

June 27, 2017 - Netherlands - Off to work today in Holland. 

Leaving Lisse after 22 miles out of Amsterdam on Monday and a wonderful stay with Eduard and Marthy at Bed & Rest - De Dahlia. A beautiful house with energetic neighbor boys, Sam and Simon. 





Monday, June 26, 2017

Launching The Amazing Ride in Tribute to My Dad Today

June 26, 2017 - Washington County - Today, the first day of The Amazing Ride For Alzheimer's, I'll be traveling in the Netherlands to kick off the bicycling fundraiser in tribute to my dad, Al Steffes (photo below), who has Alzheimer's disease.

As in the past, I'll ride in tribute each day over the next three weeks to someone affected by Alzheimer's.

If you would like me to ride in the name of someone you know, send their name, a jpeg photo, a brief note if you like, and your contribution of $100. The entire $100 donation will go toward Alzheimer's programs at Cedar Community.

Checks should be made made payable to "Cedar Community Foundation" 113 Cedar Ridge Dr., West Bend, WI 53095


Cedar Community is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization and donations are tax-deductible.