Tulips by the Spuiplein (Or: Beauty on a rainy day)

Recently Marco took some pictures of the tulips by the Spuiplein. The tulips just appeared one day – before that the area was barren all winter!

It’s an appropriate topic considering we had one day of really, really good weather today. It was about 24C/75F. The winds shifted and came from Africa today. But only for one day.

And a look at the area in general:

Orange, pink and just a bit of yellow!

And a look at the raindrops stuck to the flowers:

In case you are interested, Spuiplein is in the middle of a renovation. The next stage will begin this fall. You can read more about it at projecten.denhaag.nl. The article is in Dutch but there are pictures and a Google translate option available.

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , | Leave a comment

On horseback (Or: Statue of Willem the Silent)

During the holiday weekend (a four day weekend!) I decided to take a picture of the equestrian statue of Willem the Silent outside of the Paleis Noordeinde. I was drawn by the color of the statue against the gray-white of the building behind it. Unfortunately the sun decided to mostly disappear at that moment.

Here is a Google Maps link on where to find the statue.

In other news:

New species of tiny geckos found in India named after Vincent van Gogh from nltimes.nl

King’s Day in The Hague from denhaag.com in English. This includes the King’s Fair (= carnival) at the Malieveld, opening this Friday and running through Saturday, April 27. There’s even a geranium market on Lange Voorhout on King’s Day!

Route of Tour de France Femmes announced from denhaag.com. The Tour de France femmes will be cycling through The Hague (and Rotterdam) on August 12 this year.

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Dutch flowers in St Peter’s Square (Or: A decades old tradition)

Since 1985, the Netherlands has been sending thousands of flowers to the Vatican for Easter Mass. This year they will be sending over 20,000 flowers. Here’s a tweet of how it looks, although I am not sure if this is an arrangement from 2024 or from an earlier year.

The tradition in 1985 for Titus Brandsma’s beatification. See also: Dutch Flowers Back in St. Peter’s Square in Rome At Easter at seedworld.com. In case you’re wondering, no flowers were sent in 2020 due to the corona crisis. In 2021, even though there were no major gatherings allowed in Italy, roses were sent. That year they decorated the inside of St. Peter’s square with some roses also being sent to retirement homes in Italy. See also: Italy – An Avalanche of Roses to Celebrate Easter. Amusingly that comes from a Dutch government website which publishes agriculture news happening outside of the Netherlands (agroberichtenbuitenland.nl). How specific!

Categories: The Hague | Leave a comment

King’s Day merch (Or: I hope you like the color orange?)

King’s Day is a Dutch holiday on April 27. This year it falls on a Saturday. Annoying for those who don’t get the day off, as it isn’t standard practice in the Netherlands to give an adjacent day off if a holiday falls in the weekend. On the other hand, if the weathers good, you still have all day to party on Saturday.

Oh, and this means The Life I Live – a free music festival held the night before in The Hague’s city centre – falls on a Friday this year. The Hague government donated an extra €50,000 to the festival to keep it it around, on top of the already earmarked €400,000, as a one time (extra) donation. I can’t imagine The Hague or King’s Day without The Life I Live festival. Here are some photos I took back in 2022.

A lot of people dress up in orange for King’s Day (and some also dress up in orange for the festival the night before). Most Dutch stores take advantage of that by offering orange merchandise in the 4–6 weeks leading up to the event. Here is a look at the King’s Day offerings at Xenos:

I also saw some orange tompouce themed t-shirts being sold at Hema. Tompouce (English Wikipedia) is a pastry that is delicious, if extremely sweet and messy to eat. And of course it gets sold with orange frosting for King’s Day!

Categories: Culture, Holidays | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Random internet activities (Or: The fish doorbell)

Have you heard of the fish doorbell? (I think I posted about it at some point.)

There’s a canal in the Dutch city of Utrecht in the middle of the Netherlands. The canal is shared by boats and fish, with a boat lock that opens and closes as needed. But this is also the time of the year that the fish move upstream searching for places to spawn.

What do the fish do if the boat lock is closed? They wait.

What do they wait for? For you to press the doorbell of course!

If you see a fish on the live stream waiting at the door, you can push the doorbell. The page is at: https://visdeurbel.nl/en/the-fish-doorbell/. A bit further down on the page you see a live stream, probably full of murky water and no fish. On the right side there’s a doorbell. If you see a fish, you press the doorbell. This lets a human know they should check and open up the boat lock so the fish can pass through. (Note: if there are more than 950-999 viewers, you’ll see a YouTube stream instead with no doorbell, due to capacity issues.)

The fish doorbell news report – a YouTube channel with weekly news about what fish they saw in the last week and predictions for next week, with subtitles in English.

Nicest photos – a look at some of the nicest photos taken this year.

Categories: Culture, Utrecht | Tags: | Leave a comment

Magnolias (Or: Spring trees in Huijgenspark)

As a continuation to my last blog post, here is a look at some magnolias in another park in The Hague, this time Huijgenspark. You can read more about the area (in English) at DenHaag.com.

Here is a beautiful close up:

Gorgeous, right?

The area even has its own Little Free Library.

As you might expect, the bench behind it gets vandalized a lot. See also denhaagfm.nl (article in Dutch).

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Spring flowers (Or: Star magnolias in the Zeeheldenkwartier)

The Zeeheldenkwartier is an area near the centre of The Hague, near Kelly’s Expat shopping. See also Google Maps. I recently took some photos of the star magnolia trees in the area:

You have to be quick with these – the trees have already started to lose some of their leaves. Here’s another look, with a monument to a politician, Hendrik Goeman Borgesius (English Wikipedia) in the foreground.

And finally, some very realistic looking graffiti:

See also this blog post about turtles in the same area, but in August.

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Bad news for tourists (Or: Construction by the Hofvijver)

Okay, I am exaggerating a bit. But if you were thinking of getting a good picture of the flags at the Hofvijver here in The Hague, thank again. There is currently construction on the tram tracks in front of the area. And that’s ignoring the nearby construction which means the Binnenhof is closed until at least 2028 (dutchnews.nl).

In the meantime visitors can visit the Information centre binnenhof Renovation – see also denhaag.com in English. You can find the information centre at Plaats 22, not far from the Binnenhof (Google Maps).

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , , | Leave a comment

Statues and birds (Or: More signs of spring)

While walking recently I came across a group of Egyptian geese (admittedly, I had to use Google Images to figure out what type of goose it was). See also Wikipedia in English.

And here are all of the young walking near the water of the Hofvijver:

And as a bonus, here is the Haags Jantje statue in the same area. He is pointing to where his father works, at the parliament (Binnenhof). The boy referenced died in 1299 at age 15. You can read more about him in English at expathollandinfo.nl.

Personally I really like his (temporary) spring outfit. in his left hand he has some of the yellow flowers. In his right hand he has a crocheted bird and he also wears a crown of crocheted birds. Someone definitely went to the trouble to dress him up for spring.

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , , | Leave a comment

Sun! (Or: The first signs of spring)

It is finally starting to feel like spring around here. On Thursday the temperature was around 16C/60F, although that was definitely the exception and not the norm. But the flowers have started to bloom, and coworkers are starting to talk fondly about the clocks changing at the end of the month to give us more daylight in the evenings…

It’s cherry blossom season in the Netherlands (but not for long!) from dutchreview.nl. Apparently you can find cherry blossoms in the Bankastraat, Prins Hendrikplein or near the Peace Palace. I haven’t really been on the look out – I only know of the more famous cherry trees in Japan or Washington D.C. – but maybe I should go have a look this weekend?

Sunday is also St. Patrick’s Day, which will be celebrated on Sunday in the Grote Markt from late afternoon to just before midnight. Read more at stpatricksdaydenhaag.nl.

In other news—I don’t think this will work but you have this over at The Guardian: ‘Would you like to explore with a spliff?’: Amsterdam tries to deter troublesome visitors with quiz.

And finally, here is a random photo of a poster from Extinction Rebellion I saw at a tram stop earlier this month. The group wants to block the A12 highway near Centraal Station again in April.

It reads:

Are you forgetting to sponsor the fossil industry?

Complete your tax returns before July 14. You contribute fairly, while big, dirty companies barely pay any tax. We give them 39.7 to 46.4 billion euros in subsidy – on average 5,000 euros per taxpayer. That way they can keep the billions in profits but not suffer the consequences.

Do you want to protest this? Visit belastingstaking.nl [belastingstaking = tax strike]

Actually, what caught my eye was the government logo at the top, just barely visible. It definitely looked legitimate until you read the text.

Categories: The Hague | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.