In looking for fun parts of the Netherlands to explore this trip, I was interested in the National Parks, in part because they tend to protect cool places, and in part, to compare them to our Provincial and National parks. One key difference I found was that whereas we generally create parks to protect as yet unimpacted parts of the country, the Netherlands was late to that party. This is what happens when you've been inhabited since medieval times. So the parks in the Netherlands are smaller and generally show evidence of substantial human use prior to becoming protected spaces.
An example of this was the Nationaal Park De Loonse en Dunense Duinen (which translates to "The De Loonse and Dunense Dunes"). I'm going to put together an entire post on how to access this park, because it took me a lot of time to figure that out, so I won't go into it here. In any case, the park basically protects a sand dune complex that is one of the biggest north of the Sahara.
The park from Google Maps |
We got to the station and the train we planned to take wasn't going past Utrecht with no explanation as to why. We asked at the NS Rail Info Office, and all they did was pull up 9292 and suggest a different route. We gave up trying to get NS help and just hopped the 9:05 train to 's Hertogenbosch (which we started calling "Certo" for short. Den Bosch would have worked, too, apparently). Thus we missed the initial connect to Tillburg, missing the bus we needed to catch.
Then our train into Certo was late, so we even missed the second connection to Tilburg (it left the station just as we pulled in). By the time we finally made it to Tilburg, the only bus we could take dropped us on the side of a major motorway near (not in) Loon op Zand, 2.5 km from our bike rental place. The bus was also STUFFED past capacity with school kids, and we had trouble even getting off the bus (no one got off the bus to make space for us to get off; we just had to forcibly squeeze our way through the mass. So un-Dutch like). We finally arrived at 11:45 AM. By the way: Loon op Zand has a pretty church.
Nice church on a nice day |
Nice steeds |
That's a lot of sand |
While having lunch, we noticed there was a wedding going on in the distance.
Maybe just the pictures being taken |
I bet those posts are at least 1 m tall |
Still, we had to explore, so for an hour, we followed one of the walking paths, past an oasis in the middle of the sand...
Seriously: where are the zebras, rhinos and giraffes? |
Shades of the Namib desert |
A whole lotta nothing out there |
That way, too. |
You can see these in sandstone rocks |
Looks like kangaroo rat, but they may not have them here |
Fox for sure |
The Loch Ness Monster? |
A roe deer |
There was an interesting research project going on along the path: crowd sourced time lapse photography of how the dunes are losing to the vegetation.
Maak 'n foto! |
The bikes were an added extra |
A nice swimming hole |
More sand |
Someone trying to emulate Deadvlei in the Namib desert |
More sand |
At the far west end looking back east |
It just goes on |
Marshmallows not yet cut up? |
We passed a small amusement park, pretty thatched buildings of questionable build quality...
One building from two halves, I suspect |
We got back to our bike rental place at 3:00 pm, plenty of time for a beer in the hotel's bar before our bus home...
A lovely way to end the day |
The view from inside the bar |
Busy place |
We scooted along, and got to the stop 3 min before the bus appeared. Unfortunately the lady didn't make it, but she said she was not in a rush. We got into Tilburg too late to catch the train to Certo, so we grabbed the next train heading to Breda instead, where we caught an Amsterdam-bound train. We got in at 6:05 PM.
The De Loonse en Dunense Duinen parks was interesting and I was glad we went -- but we would have enjoyed it WAY more had we arrived when we wanted to and been able to get home as per plan. Instead, we got to spend less than 3 hrs in the park, while spending 3 hrs to get there and 2.5 hrs to get home. Not a great time investment.
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