On her third month-day, shortly after I arrived
|
Looking properly skeptical at her mother; she has given Vicki
and me the same look as we learn her ways and try to imagine that we understand infant cognitive development |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
On her third month-day, shortly after I arrived
|
Looking properly skeptical at her mother; she has given Vicki
and me the same look as we learn her ways and try to imagine that we understand infant cognitive development |
First sight of Iceland; had I been sitting on
the port side, I would have seen Surtsey; but not Iceland |
Bombardier view
|
Mostly pretty barren, with lots of volcanic
features...crater lake
|
A mini caldera
|
Approaching Rekjavik
|
Landing
|
Taking-off
|
Temporarily well-behaved volcano
|
The breakfast view from Blenheim Lodge, a B&B in East
Finchley, where we stayed; Roger and Agri are superb hosts
|
Outside the National Gallery, George
Washington helps us focus our thoughts
|
Trafalgar Square and, look kids, it's Big Ben!
|
Lord Nelson
|
Our Dutch host in Amsterdam had recently returned from
his first visit to the UK, observing that every time an
Englishman learns how to ride a horse, they put up a statue
of him
|
Olympic countdown clock; London is only slightly abuzz
about it all; transportation, I think, will be an issue
|
Departure from Gatwick
|
Botticelli's Venus and Mars
|
And, of course, there are half a dozen of the most famous
Turners, including The Fighting Temeraire, regarded by
Britons, according to the BBC, as the nation's most
important painting
|
Renoir's Gladiolus, a favorite of Vicki's
|
The Nereid Temple from Xanthos
|
Reliefs from the Tomb of Kybernis, King of Xanthus
|
Stupid satyr tricks... (do not try this at home, kids)
|
Elgin Marbles
|
Mob scene at the Rosetta Stone
|
An old friend, the Queen of Lewis Chess
|
And always much new to learn; here a display on the survival
of glass-making in Europe after the fall of the western Roman
empire
|
So, anyway, we appear to be in Holland (this
is from Friday, the one day it didn't rain)
|
And took the bus into Amsterdam, not to see anything in
particular, but just to walk around and do the ambience thing
|
A major part of which is drinking in the streets
and the consequent effluence, relieved, as it
were, by these strategically but not discreetly
located outdoor pissoirs |
A street scene or two
|
Two
|
Vicki in line for the world-famous "vegetarian" pommes frites
at VleminckX (since 1887); they were decadently good,
especially with the curry sauce |
Monster cathedral; I don't know where it ranks on the
Vatican's "mine's bigger than yours" list, but it is a bit overwhelming both outside and inside |
Chapel of the 3 Magi in the ambulatory; windows are the
oldest in the cathedral, 13th century |
The center two windows date from 1265 and
depict corresponding scenes from the Old Testament (prophecies) and the New (realizations) |
The Gero Cross, donated by Archbishop Gero
in 976; it is the oldest remaining monumental crucifixion |
Beautiful mosaic floor throughout
|
North side windows, 1507-1509
|
Notable for the coats of arms of their donors; this one notable
for its elephants; or possibly a contribution of a political action committee of the current Party of Greed and Hate |
Ever popular crucifixion of St. Peter
|
Extremely rare fully rotated view
|
From the stern to the bow: immensity, yet light and lightness
|
We skipped the German-Roman museum this time; we think
we have seen our fair share of Roman stuff
|
The twin towers; Vicki poses for scale; they
are each 505 feet high--fifty stories
|
We cross the Rhine and head for Holland
|