After Belgium we moved next-door into the Netherlands.
Couldn’t resist taking a photo of the truck in the windmill-rich area of Kinderdijk.
With wild camping being once again mostly illegal, we booked campgrounds online in Netherlands as well. They were still running around $20 a night, more outside of big cities like Rotterdam and Amsterdam. Similar to Belgium, most of the campgrounds had great toilet and shower facilities, but often had other features we did not need or care about (playgrounds, shops, cafes, swimming pools even!) We tried to seek out the more basic ones. One of our favorite sites was on the Rhine river outside of Rotterdam where we sat in the evenings and watched the tug boats and freighters go by.
Recreatiepark de Oude Maas, entertaining campsite outside of Rotterdam
We were pleasantly surprised when we rolled into Gouda, the town that is not the cheese. The weather wasn’t cooperating but the town itself was pretty.
We of course had to buy some namesake cheese as well, it was excellent
Moving on, we next checked out Rotterdam. It was raized by bombs in WW2 due to a mixup of time zones so it has been rebuilt with an eye to design and an eclectic mix of architecture.
Quite different!
Because you can never visit enough gorgeous medieval towns set on canals, we set off to Leiden next. Enjoyed a fabulous day wandering the small streets
Our final stop on the Netherlands tour was the crazy, quirky city of Amsterdam. We had a great time here, possibly as there was a distinct lack of tourists and we found a great camping spot that allowed us easy access to the city. The combination of our quiet camping spot with easy access to the cultural sites and sounds of the city worked well.
Campin Gaasper outside of Amsterdam - 15 minutes on the metro to downtown. Almost to ourselves at first. Not exactly wild camping.
Central plaza - tourism is down 75% - lucky us!
The people Amsterdam are absolutely bike crazy
Next, on to Denmark! More write up and photos at
www.roguewanderers.com