[Edit: Photos from our time in Brugge available here.]
After a very comfortable nights sleep and a filling breakfast at the B&B, I repeated to Kaddee that the day was her’s till about 4pm or so and we would do whatever she would like to do.
She decided to do laundry :-). We spent an hour or so in a laundromat, and she hit up a couple of 2nd hand clothing stores that were near the laundromat for a sweater and a few other items. [We were really cold the entire time in Belgium]
After that exciting start to the day, we headed out for tourist-time, non-beer.
Kaddee had decided that she wanted to go to one of the canals that ring the city and visit one of the windmills that was there. Being the clever girl that she is, our meandering path took us by another great beer pub.
After wandering around the town a bit, we stopped at Terrastje Brugge.
A nice little place with a pleasant patio, just beyond the craziness of the central tourist area. Sitting there in the very warm sun, out of the wind, we were actually warm for our first time in “the low countries.”
Kaddee ordered a Kriek on tap. Sitting in the warm sun, drinking kriek finally made sense to her. “I get it now” were her words I believe. We had some nibblies and
- Orval. More “lively” than I have had in the US.
- the aforementioned kriek
- St Bernadus triple. Good, maltier than most triples i thought.
- Bruges triple. Tasty and much lighter than the St Bernadus.
- Chimay blue. Commonly available beer in the states.
We then walked out to one of the outer canals and the windmills.
They are on grassy little hills. I don’t know if the hills were man made, but there are not a lot of other hills in Brugge, so I suspect so.
The grassy hills were popular with families picnicing and couples snuggling. It was a beautiful day.
We walked up to one of the windmills that is open to the public with explanations of how they worked and how they were built. We spent the 2EU to go up inside. It was a steep climb.
What I found interesting is that the entire windmill can be pivoted to put the blades into the optimum position. I don’t know if that is a common feature of windmills, but it was pretty neat engineering.
All the buttressing and post and beam construction were pretty neat to see as well.
What was not so neat was the amount of swaying and creaking going on inside. They should put a sign out that says
If this windmill’s a rockin’, don’t come knockin’.