Rain or drizzle all day, 13-18deg, 40km, av. 14km/hr, tot. 1291km. Awoke to the pitter patter of rain on the windows, but seeing we've got a stopover it doesn't matter. Time to just lounge around in bed and wait for a 8am breakfast.
We are staying in our first B&B, an old converted three story mansion about 800m from the city centre
. It's decked out beautifully, no expense spared, and our room is quite large. No soccer hooligan in this neighbourhood. Peter, who owns and runs the place, also is kept busy taking clients on battlefield or Cycle tours. And the B&B is conveniently located opposite a brewery, location, location, location.
Ypres is the first city we've seen that really takes full advantage of the WW1 Battlefields story. Without being tacky, there are plenty of places in France which could do very well out of the millions of foreign visitors who flock there every year to visit the cemeteries and museums. Maybe they think it's wrong to profit from such a thing? A coffee shop or two, a restaurant / snack bar here and there would be okay, we often hung out for a place to stop and refuel but found nothing. Some of the little isolated areas could certainly do with the employment opportunities.
Again there were dozens of WW1 Cemeteries around Ypres we could have visited but we try to pick the most relevant or interesting.
So after a good brekky, including freshly cooked bacon & eggs, we visited the Flanders Field Museum in town
. Extremely modern with all the multimedia gizmos and gadgets, along with the normal stuff you'd expect in such a place.
Greg then mounted his trusty steed and headed out to Essex Farm, 2.5km from our B&B. (Wendy had a lay afternoon out of the rain). This is where the famous LTCOL McCrae wrote that moving poem "In Flanders Fields". We loved this poem, it captures the whole essence of war. Once learnt never forgotten.
Time to remember it:
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with those who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields
.
LTCOL John McCrae, Medical Officer, Canadian Artillery. Sadly John died of illness in late January 1918z
The bunker where it is believed he may have written the poem is preserved near the memorial. While walking through the Commonwealth cemetery nearby (you are never far from one here) Greg found a headstone where a lot of crosses and some teddy bears had been placed. Then he saw why, the soldier buried there was 15 years old when killed. One of the many who had lied about his age. We have since found out that it is the most visited grave by school kids from England on the Western Front.
It was then onto the Yorkshire Trench & Dugout which had been re-discovered during some canal works in 1998. During excavation hundreds of remains and artifacts were discovered. It seems wherever you dig around here you'd find the same.
The Passchendaele Museum and Tyne Cot Cemetery and Memorial were next. Tyne Cot is the largest burial cemetery in the world with nearly 12,000 graves. Another 37,000 names of the missing, are inscribed on the walls of the Memorial. There was also at least a dozen other "small" (less than 5,000 graves) cemeteries he saw either on the way out to Tyne Cot or while returning via a different route. Hundreds of these "small" ones don't even get a mention on the maps available at the Tourist Office. We think we may have seen sufficient war cemeteries for a little while.
Dinner was at an Irish Pub, Irish Stew and beer of course.
STOPOVER YPRES.
Friday, July 11, 2014
Ypres, Flanders, Belgium
Other Entries
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14BAD SACKINGEN, GERMANY TO BASEL, SWITZERLAND
Jun 2417 days priorBad Säckingen, Germanyphoto_camera7videocam 0comment 0 -
15STOPOVER - BASEL
Jun 2516 days priorBasel, Switzerlandphoto_camera13videocam 1comment 1 -
16STOPOVER BASEL
Jun 2615 days priorBasel, Switzerlandphoto_camera4videocam 0comment 0 -
17BASEL, SWITZERLAND TO MULHOUSE, FRANCE
Jun 2714 days priorBasel, Switzerlandphoto_camera7videocam 0comment 1 -
18MULHOUSE TO COLMAR, BOTH FRANCE
Jun 2813 days priorMulhouse, Francephoto_camera12videocam 0comment 1 -
19COLMAR TO STRASBOURG, FRANCE
Jun 2912 days priorColmar, Francephoto_camera9videocam 1comment 1 -
20STRASBOURG TO SARREBOURG.
Jun 3011 days priorStrasbourg, Francephoto_camera10videocam 1comment 0 -
21SARREBOURG TO NANCY
Jul 0110 days priorLuneville, Francephoto_camera7videocam 2comment 0 -
22NANCY TO METZ
Jul 029 days priorArry, Francephoto_camera8videocam 0comment 2 -
23STOPOVER METZ
Jul 038 days priorMetz, Francephoto_camera15videocam 0comment 2 -
24METZ TO REIMS
Jul 047 days priorMetz, Francephoto_camera6videocam 0comment 2 -
25REIMS TO SAINT-QUENTIN.
Jul 056 days priorReims, Francephoto_camera11videocam 0comment 0 -
26SAINT-QUENTIN TO AMIENS.
Jul 065 days priorSaint-Quentin, Francephoto_camera10videocam 0comment 0 -
27AMIENS TO ARRAS
Jul 074 days priorArras, Francephoto_camera9videocam 0comment 1 -
28ARRAS TO LILLE
Jul 083 days priorLille, Francephoto_camera9videocam 0comment 2 -
29STOPOVER AT LILLE
Jul 092 days priorLille, Francephoto_camera2videocam 0comment 0 -
30LILLE, FRANCE TO YPRES, BELGIUM.
Jul 101 day priorLille, Francephoto_camera7videocam 0comment 2 -
31STOPOVER YPRES.
Jul 11Ypres, Belgiumphoto_camera13videocam 1comment 0 -
32YPRES TO GHENT, BOTH BELGIUM.
Jul 121 day laterYpres, Belgiumphoto_camera7videocam 1comment 1 -
33STOPOVER GHENT.
Jul 132 days laterGhent, Belgiumphoto_camera12videocam 0comment 1 -
34GHENT TO ASSE (VIA BRUSSELS).
Jul 143 days laterGhent, Belgiumphoto_camera5videocam 1comment 0 -
35STOPOVER IN ASSE.
Jul 154 days laterAsse, Belgiumphoto_camera10videocam 0comment 0 -
36STOPOVER ASSE.
Jul 165 days laterAsse, Belgiumphoto_camera3videocam 0comment 0 -
37ASSE TO ANTWERP, BOTH BELGIUM.
Jul 176 days laterMeir, Belgiumphoto_camera6videocam 0comment 0 -
38ANTWERP, BELGIUM TO BREDA, HOLLAND
Jul 187 days laterAntwerp, Belgiumphoto_camera7videocam 0comment 0 -
39BREDA TO ROTTERDAM.
Jul 198 days laterBredaphoto_camera9videocam 1comment 0 -
40STOPOVER ROTTERDAM.
Jul 209 days laterRotterdamphoto_camera16videocam 0comment 0 -
41ROTTERDAM TO THE HAGUE.
Jul 2110 days laterRotterdamphoto_camera11videocam 0comment 0 -
42STOPOVER THE HAGUE.
Jul 2211 days laterThe Haguephoto_camera9videocam 0comment 0 -
43THE HAGUE TO LEIDEN, BOTH HOLLAND.
Jul 2312 days laterThe Haguephoto_camera13videocam 0comment 1 -
44LEIDEN TO HAARLEM, HOLLAND.
Jul 2413 days laterLeidenphoto_camera11videocam 0comment 0 -
45HAARLEM
Jul 2514 days laterHaarlemphoto_camera8videocam 0comment 1 -
46HAARLEM.
Jul 2615 days laterHaarlemphoto_camera6videocam 0comment 0 -
47HAARLEM.
Jul 2716 days laterHaarlemphoto_camera9videocam 0comment 0 -
48AMSTERDAM TO DUBAI
Jul 2817 days laterHaarlemphoto_camera6videocam 0comment 1 -
49DUBAI TO BRISBANE THEN HERVEY BAY
Jul 2918 days laterDubai, United Arab Emiratesphoto_camera3videocam 1comment 0
2025-05-22