The next day we made our first use of our EuroRail pass by taking the train outside of Amsterdam to visit De Hoge Veluwe National Park. We were quite impressed with the comfort and efficiency of the European train. I became even more impressed after showing the conductor our EuroRail pass and he told us we should be up in a First Class car instead of the Second Class one. We moved, but even the Second Class car was plenty impressive to me.
After about an hour, we got off the train and waited for the bus that would take us into the park. The Hoge Veluwe National Park was not exactly what we had expected. Back home we live close to the Mountain National Parks in the Canadian Rockies, and we were spoiled by the spectacular views and wildlife of those internationally known parks. In comparison, De Hoge was a let down, but we nevertheless enjoyed seeing it. Its landscape was flat, partially heath and partially treed. I guess they have herds of Red Deer and other wildlife, but while there, we didn’t see any.
De Hoge Veluwe Park was a bit of a strange mixture. It was initially created by a wealthy couple, the husband of which was an avid hunter, and the wife, a passionate art collector. They bought up the land to create the park hoping to bring both nature and art together for the public.
Once we got off the bus, we got ourselves a map and climbed on the free white bicycle, to begin our exploration of the place. The area was very flat, so biking was a lot easier than in the Robson Valley.
We biked down Trail One, which led us to a sandy area which held the hunting lodge. It mysteriously emitted “machine gun” sounds (?). The Hunting Lodge was an architectural interesting building which featured a high tower. (Photo below) It certainly didn’t look like any hunting lodges I had ever imagined.
More to our interests was an art museum that surprisingly, had paintings by Van Gogh, Surat, Pissarro, and Picasso.
After a lunch at the museum, we got back on our bikes and took Path Two. There were a lot of other bikers on the trail whizzing by us in both directions.
It was a long bike ride to the Park entrance, and we were quite dismayed upon discovering that we had ended up in a different entrance that the one we arrived on, and that our return bus ticket, weren’t valid at this other entrance. We ended up hiking out of the park, and buying another bus ticket to take us to Arden, where we used our EuroRail pass to get us back to Amsterdam.
Take a look at my paintings: davidmarchant2.ca