Amsterdam, The Netherlands

From Channel to Channel in a Surreal Holland


Oudezids Channel
Friends relax by the Oudezids canal, in the heart of Amsterdam's Red Light District.
Red Light District, Red Neons
The scarlet lights of the Sex Palace, one of the Red Light District's sex establishments.
Banquet Bike
Decoration of a building in the vicinity of the Rijzksmuseum with an illustration of Bartholo's "Amsterdam Civil Guard Banquet in Celebration of the Peace of Munster"
reflection of history
Pleasure boat and tours enters the Oudezids canal and the oldest part of Amsterdam.
I am
Resident passes by one of the city's famous design signatures "
coffee shop corner
Passersby skirt the Baba coffee shop, one of many in Amsterdam.
Shades
Passersby clustered at the base of the National Memorial statue on Dam square.
elegant addresses
View of historic Amsterdam houses from the top of the tower of the Oudeskerk, its church and its oldest building.
On a day tour
Amsterdam visitor poses next to the musketeers at the base of the statue of the painter Rembrandt van Rijn, by Louis Royer who was inspired by one of the painter's most famous works "The Night Watch".
Creative Inclination
Visitors descend the ramp from a sloping garden in the vicinity of the van Gogh Museum.
a deadly deception
Dispersed warning throughout the city warns of the danger of the fake and potentially deadly drug sold by dealers deceived or unscrupulous.
leisure channel II
Friends chat between a channel and a sex shop in the Red Light District.
cultural climbing
Visitors to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam climb the letters of one of the famous signs
Amsterdam Peculiar
Line of facades of historic houses in the vicinity of Amsterdam's Grand Central Station.
Vincent
Children pass in front of an illustrated panel with the face of Vincent van Gogh delimiting works to improve the museum that was dedicated to his life and work.
last preparations
Maid prepares to open the doors of a bar in the oldest part of Amsterdam.
Liberal when it comes to drugs and sex, Amsterdam welcomes a crowd of outsiders. Among canals, bicycles, coffee shops and brothel windows, we search, in vain, for its quieter side.

During one of several chatting breakfasts, Michiel van Os, a former university professor renowned for history, answers us with restrained emotion and some nostalgia: “I retired exactly on the famous September 11, 2001.

During my farewell speech, people seemed a bit agitated but only told me what had happened at the end of the day”.

René, the wife, finished his career as a judge a month later.

Not that it could compare to the terrorist cataclysm that razed the Twin Towers, but by then the building in which they lived was suffering its own structural damage from the sinking of the flooded ground in which Amsterdam had long since settled.

Line of facades of historic houses in the vicinity of Amsterdam's Grand Central Station.

Also more and more affected by the demands of the stairs that they had to overcome in their day-to-day life, the van Os found a more than adequate alternative in the top floor duplex of a building from the beginning of the century. XVII.

They were enchanted by its historic architecture and location next to the Jordaan district, opposite Westerkerk and Anne Frank's house-museum.

The couple shared the privilege of living there, in an elegant home with a lot of antiques and a library, harmonious expressions of two obvious passions, reading and the antique.

Decoration of a building in the vicinity of the Rijzksmuseum with an illustration of Bartholo's “Amsterdam Civil Guard Banquet in Celebration of the Peace of Munster”

We, due to almost family relationships, found ourselves gifted with a few days of kind welcome in their secular home. It's been a long time since we intuited the passing of time like there.

At night, the ticking of old clocks, rope and cuckoo clocks lull us. Simultaneously – or almost – the ringing of the bells of several churches around.

The Pungent Past of Anne Frank and Family

By day we inspected the huge line of visitors to Anne Frank's house who, like a kind of human hourglass, we watched flow across the Keisergracht canal from the large window on the lower floor of the dwelling.

During our stay in Amsterdam, fresh news reported that Annelies Marie Frank – her full name – would have succumbed two months before the date her death went down in history, victim of starvation and typhus, in the German concentration camp in Bergen Belsen.

Today, in a patient and only symbolic sacrifice, hundreds of people wait in the cold and rain to peek into the hiding place that the Frank family has built behind a bookcase in the building where Anne's father worked.

The shelter served its purpose until they were betrayed, captured and joined by the millions of victims of the Holocaust.

Tickets to visit that dismal hideout were sold out for several days.

The Proliferation of Inescapable Coffee Shops

As such, we pass through the door of the building, proceeding to explore the heart of the once working-class neighborhood of the Jordaan: its functional houses and, along the canals, the elegant houseboats in which thousands of Amsterdamers have become accustomed to living.

Leisure Channel

Friends relax by the Oudezids canal, in the heart of Amsterdam's Red Light District.

We walk along the threshold of the city's historic and tourist ring.

Over there, the coffee shops there were a good number of them. They give the streets and alleys an eccentric aroma that only the frequent gaufre houses competed with.

Many residents complained that the first ones were smearing their homes.

Electronic signs throughout the city warned of the danger that the dealers street performers in Amsterdam: “White Heroine Sold as Cocaine. Last November, three tourists died.”

Dispersed warning throughout the city warns of the danger of the fake and potentially deadly drug sold by dealers deceived or unscrupulous.

A Comic-Drama Starring Death

We ended up coming across death, even more unexpectedly.

We rested in Dam Square, in the vicinity of statue-men and other mobile characters, those who make their living by foisting photographs on passersby.

Passersby clustered at the base of the National Memorial statue on Dam square.

Among them stood out three reapers wrapped in black tunics, with skull masks and plastic scythes. Believe it or not, these macabre businesswomen recruited interested parties in large numbers.

One of them, middle-aged, looking like a bully, took his photo but refused to pay for it. Discussion leads to discussion, there were already three Deaths who, allied, were stirred up to the man.

The latter, more than in good health, in excellent shape, backed off but, while responding verbally, also countered with raised fists.

The scene lasted several minutes, until the police appeared and put an end to what we labeled the most morbid and absurd fight we have ever witnessed.

Amsterdam's Frantic Cyclist Transit

Wherever we go, the traffic proves to be as organized as possible.

Still, many of the narrow streets that line the canals are shared by cars, buses, trams, motorcycles, bicycles and pedestrians, residents and thousands of outsiders who, for the easter week, arrived from all sides.

Going through them or traversing them without incident requires constant concentration and perfect movement management. Even so, things always went well.

Maid prepares to open the doors of a bar in the oldest part of Amsterdam.

René, for example, still complained of pain because some all-terrain vehicle had recently passed over his foot.

We arrived at the historic center of Amsterdam as night fell, a little chilled. Safe from incident.

Amsterdam's Controversial Red Light District

As it's supposed to, we stalk your lewd Red Light District.

Imbued with the pure and hard democracy that Holland is so proud of, the city had been discussing for a long time the permanence of prostitutes in the windows of brothels.

Meanwhile, hordes of tourists, many of them just sexual, assessed her charms.

Others, mere curious people, tried to photograph the exposed women even against their express will.

Friends chat between a channel and a sex shop in the Red Light District.

A notice in a half-walled window with the 800-year-old Protestant church of Oude Kerk – the oldest building and church in Amsterdam – warned, in English: “Sex workers don't want to be photographed. Do not take pictures of windows.”

And the Women's Right to Privacy Complex behind the Showcases

The website pic-amsterdam.com (PIC of the Prostitute Information Center) which, founded by the whore Mariska Majoor, promoted tours through the Red Light District, workshops and other businesses and initiatives, complemented the warning: “disrespect can give rise to problematic situations for yourself and your camera.

Remember that many sex workers lead a double life. Photographs represent a danger as they can be seen by acquaintances or invade your privacy in other ways”.

Red Light District

The scarlet lights of the Sex Palace, one of the Red Light District's sex establishments.

Yet every now and then, instead of the conventional eye-blinks and other bolder customer seduction schemes, we see and hear scarlet or purplish women slamming their hands with all their might on the glass.

Or go outside and intimidate the offenders with angry screams and a collection of curses.

We also heard impressive accounts of persecution carried out by both them and the pimps.

Amsterdam's Civilization Exuberance and the Contribution of the Jews Expelled from Iberia

The following afternoon we ascend to the top of the belfry tower of the Oude Kerk.

From that top, we can see 360º the old houses as far as the eye can see, largely spared during World War II – the port of Rotterdam would be the most battered Dutch city.

View of historic Amsterdam houses from the top of the tower of the Oudeskerk, its church and its oldest building.

As we climb the dark staircase, the guide reminds us that the city and the Netherlands have benefited enormously from having welcomed the Jews expelled from Iberia by the Inquisition and that many of its inhabitants still have Portuguese or Hispanic nicknames.

It still pushes us that Portugal is not part of Spain only thanks to the Netherlands. "How is that?" we ask, intrigued to double the premise's total absence of historical context.

"It's just that if it wasn't for the fight we gave them in the Eighty Years War, you had not been able to get rid of the Filipes.”

“Oh, OK! Well seen, well seen!” we support you without reservation.

Resident passes by one of the city's famous design signatures

Saba, The Netherlands

The Mysterious Dutch Queen of Saba

With a mere 13km2, Saba goes unnoticed even by the most traveled. Little by little, above and below its countless slopes, we unveil this luxuriant Little Antille, tropical border, mountainous and volcanic roof of the shallowest european nation.
Valletta, Malta

An ex-Humble Amazing Capital

At the time of its foundation, the Order of Knights Hospitaller called it "the most humble". Over the centuries, the title ceased to serve him. In 2018, Valletta was the tiniest European Capital of Culture ever and one of the most steeped in history and dazzling in memory.
Helsinki, Finland

The Design that Came from the Cold

With much of the territory above the Arctic Circle, Finns respond to the climate with efficient solutions and an obsession with art, aesthetics and modernism inspired by neighboring Scandinavia.
Oslo, Norway

A Overcapitalized Capital

One of Norway's problems has been deciding how to invest the billions of euros from its record-breaking sovereign wealth fund. But even immoderate resources don't save Oslo from its social inconsistencies.
Juneau, Alaska

The Little Capital of Greater Alaska

From June to August, Juneau disappears behind cruise ships that dock at its dockside. Even so, it is in this small capital that the fate of the 49th American state is decided.
Saint Petersburg, Russia

When the Russian Navy Stations in Saint Petersburg

Russia dedicates the last Sunday of July to its naval forces. On that day, a crowd visits large boats moored on the Neva River as alcohol-drenched sailors seize the city.
Stavanger, Norway

The Motor City of Norway

The abundance of offshore oil and natural gas and the headquarters of the companies in charge of exploiting them have promoted Stavanger from the Norwegian energy capital preserve. Even so, this city didn't conform. With a prolific historical legacy, at the gates of a majestic fjord, cosmopolitan Stavanger has long propelled the Land of the Midnight Sun.
Bergen, Norway

The Great Hanseatic Port of Norway

Already populated in the early 1830th century, Bergen became the capital, monopolized northern Norwegian commerce and, until XNUMX, remained one of the largest cities in Scandinavia. Today, Oslo leads the nation. Bergen continues to stand out for its architectural, urban and historical exuberance.
hippopotami, chobe national park, botswana
Safari
Chobe NP, Botswana

Chobe: A River on the Border of Life with Death

Chobe marks the divide between Botswana and three of its neighboring countries, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Namibia. But its capricious bed has a far more crucial function than this political delimitation.
Braga or Braka or Brakra in Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 6th – Braga, Nepal

The Ancient Nepal of Braga

Four days of walking later, we slept at 3.519 meters from Braga (Braka). Upon arrival, only the name is familiar to us. Faced with the mystical charm of the town, arranged around one of the oldest and most revered Buddhist monasteries on the Annapurna circuit, we continued our journey there. acclimatization with ascent to Ice Lake (4620m).
holy plain, Bagan, Myanmar
Architecture & Design
Bagan, Myanmar

The Plain of Pagodas, Temples and other Heavenly Redemptions

Burmese religiosity has always been based on a commitment to redemption. In Bagan, wealthy and fearful believers continue to erect pagodas in hopes of winning the benevolence of the gods.
The small lighthouse at Kallur, highlighted in the capricious northern relief of the island of Kalsoy.
Adventure
Kalsoy, Faroe Islands

A Lighthouse at the End of the Faroese World

Kalsoy is one of the most isolated islands in the Faroe archipelago. Also known as “the flute” due to its long shape and the many tunnels that serve it, a mere 75 inhabitants inhabit it. Much less than the outsiders who visit it every year, attracted by the boreal wonder of its Kallur lighthouse.
4th of July Fireworks-Seward, Alaska, United States
Ceremonies and Festivities
Seward, Alaska

The Longest 4th of July

The independence of the United States is celebrated, in Seward, Alaska, in a modest way. Even so, the 4th of July and its celebration seem to have no end.
Vaquero enters a street lined with young palm trees.
Cities
Álamos, Sonora, Mexico

Three Centuries among "Álamos" and Andalusian Portals

Founded in 1685, after the discovery of silver veins, Álamos developed based on an Andalusian urban structure and architecture. With the end of silver, his other wealth gained him. A genuineness and post-colonial tranquility that sets it apart from the state of Sonora and the vast west of Mexico.
young saleswoman, nation, bread, uzbekistan
Meal
Fergana Valley, Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan, The Nation That Does Not Lack Bread

Few countries employ cereals like Uzbekistan. In this republic of Central Asia, bread plays a vital and social role. The Uzbeks produce it and consume it with devotion and in abundance.
Visitors to Ernest Hemingway's Home, Key West, Florida, United States
Culture
Key West, United States

Hemingway's Caribbean Playground

Effusive as ever, Ernest Hemingway called Key West "the best place I've ever been...". In the tropical depths of the contiguous US, he found evasion and crazy, drunken fun. And the inspiration to write with intensity to match.
Sport
Competitions

Man: an Ever Tested Species

It's in our genes. For the pleasure of participating, for titles, honor or money, competitions give meaning to the world. Some are more eccentric than others.
Traveling
Chefchouen to Merzouga, Morocco

Morocco from Top to Bottom

From the aniseed alleys of Chefchaouen to the first dunes of the Sahara, Morocco reveals the sharp contrasts of the first African lands, as Iberia has always seen in this vast Maghreb kingdom.
Colonial Church of San Francisco de Assis, Taos, New Mexico, USA
Ethnic
Taos, USA

North America Ancestor of Taos

Traveling through New Mexico, we were dazzled by the two versions of Taos, that of the indigenous adobe hamlet of Taos Pueblo, one of the towns of the USA inhabited for longer and continuously. And that of Taos city that the Spanish conquerors bequeathed to the Mexico: Mexico gave in to United States and that a creative community of native descendants and migrated artists enhance and continue to praise.
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

life outside

History
São Nicolau, Cape Verde

Photography of Nha Terra São Nicolau

The voice of the late Cesária Verde crystallized the feeling of Cape Verdeans who were forced to leave their island. who visits São Nicolau or, wherever it may be, admires images that illustrate it well, understands why its people proudly and forever call it their land.
Passage, Tanna, Vanuatu to the West, Meet the Natives
Islands
Tanna, Vanuatu

From where Vanuatu Conquered the Western World

The TV show “Meet the Native” took Tanna's tribal representatives to visit Britain and the USA Visiting their island, we realized why nothing excited them more than returning home.
Horses under a snow, Iceland Never Ending Snow Island Fire
Winter White
Husavik a Myvatn, Iceland

Endless Snow on the Island of Fire

When, in mid-May, Iceland already enjoys some sun warmth but the cold and snow persist, the inhabitants give in to an intriguing summer anxiety.
Kukenam reward
Literature
Mount Roraima, Venezuela

Time Travel to the Lost World of Mount Roraima

At the top of Mount Roraima, there are extraterrestrial scenarios that have resisted millions of years of erosion. Conan Doyle created, in "The Lost World", a fiction inspired by the place but never got to step on it.
rusty boat, Aral Sea, Uzbekistan
Nature
Aral Sea, Uzbequistan

The Lake that Cotton Absorbed

In 1960, the Aral Sea was one of the four largest lakes in the world. Irrigation projects dried up much of the water and fishermen's livelihoods. In return, the USSR flooded Uzbekistan with vegetable white gold.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Cachena cow in Valdreu, Terras de Bouro, Portugal
Natural Parks
Campos do GerêsTerras de Bouro, Portugal

Through the Campos do Gerês and the Terras de Bouro

We continue on a long, zigzag tour through the domains of Peneda-Gerês and Bouro, inside and outside our only National Park. In this one of the most worshiped areas in the north of Portugal.
, Mexico, city of silver and gold, homes over tunnels
UNESCO World Heritage
Guanajuato, Mexico

The City that Shines in All Colors

During the XNUMXth century, it was the city that produced the most silver in the world and one of the most opulent in Mexico and colonial Spain. Several of its mines are still active, but the impressive wealth of Guanuajuato lies in the multicolored eccentricity of its history and secular heritage.
Earp brothers look-alikes and friend Doc Holliday in Tombstone, USA
Characters
tombstone, USA

Tombstone: the City Too Hard to Die

Silver veins discovered at the end of the XNUMXth century made Tombstone a prosperous and conflictive mining center on the frontier of the United States to Mexico. Lawrence Kasdan, Kurt Russell, Kevin Costner and other Hollywood directors and actors made famous the Earp brothers and the bloodthirsty duel of “OK Corral”. The Tombstone, which, over time, has claimed so many lives, is about to last.
Beaches
Gizo, Solomon Islands

A Saeraghi Young Singers Gala

In Gizo, the damage caused by the tsunami that hit the Solomon Islands is still very visible. On the coast of Saeraghi, children's bathing happiness contrasts with their heritage of desolation.
orthodox procession
Religion
Suzdal, Russia

Centuries of Devotion to a Devoted Monk

Euthymius was a fourteenth-century Russian ascetic who gave himself body and soul to God. His faith inspired Suzdal's religiosity. The city's believers worship him as the saint he has become.
On Rails
On Rails

Train Travel: The World Best on Rails

No way to travel is as repetitive and enriching as going on rails. Climb aboard these disparate carriages and trains and enjoy the best scenery in the world on Rails.
Nissan, Fashion, Tokyo, Japan
Society
Tokyo, Japan

Tokyo's fashion

In ultra-populous and hyper-coded Japan, there is always room for more sophistication and creativity. Whether national or imported, it is in the capital that they begin to parade the new Japanese looks.
Women with long hair from Huang Luo, Guangxi, China
Daily life
Longsheng, China

Huang Luo: the Chinese Village of the Longest Hairs

In a multi-ethnic region covered with terraced rice paddies, the women of Huang Luo have surrendered to the same hairy obsession. They let the longest hair in the world grow, years on end, to an average length of 170 to 200 cm. Oddly enough, to keep them beautiful and shiny, they only use water and rice.
Flock of flamingos, Laguna Oviedo, Dominican Republic
Wildlife
Oviedo Lagoon, Dominican Republic

The (very alive) Dominican Republic Dead Sea

The hypersalinity of the Laguna de Oviedo fluctuates depending on evaporation and water supplied by rain and the flow coming from the neighboring mountain range of Bahoruco. The natives of the region estimate that, as a rule, it has three times the level of sea salt. There, we discover prolific colonies of flamingos and iguanas, among many other species that make up one of the most exuberant ecosystems on the island of Hispaniola.
Napali Coast and Waimea Canyon, Kauai, Hawaii Wrinkles
Scenic Flights
napali coast, Hawaii

Hawaii's Dazzling Wrinkles

Kauai is the greenest and rainiest island in the Hawaiian archipelago. It is also the oldest. As we explore its Napalo Coast by land, sea and air, we are amazed to see how the passage of millennia has only favored it.