Saturday, 21 September 2024

City of patience

I had it all planned so well. After publishing my first travel post last Sunday, I would be making a start with the second one on Monday evening after work, selecting photos and assembling a couple of collages each day, ultimately finishing and publishing the thing on Friday. 

Well, what can I say? Courtesy of a stressful week, which left me tired and uninspired, things didn't quite work out that way. Other than catching up with blogland, everything else was put on the back burner until at last I made a half-hearted start with browsing my photos on Wednesday. The first batch of collages was made on Thursday, while the rest followed on Friday. And that's before I was able to put pen to paper, so to speak. 

In other words, it soon became clear that there was no way I'd be meeting my self-imposed deadline, so thank you for your patience and for bearing with me.



Unfortunately, this wasn't the only plan that went awry! 

Originally, a trip across the border to France was on the menu for Tuesday the 3rd of September. However, one look through our window confirmed the forecasted weather for that day. The sky was sulking and denying the sun a look-in. What's more, according to our phone's weather app there would be rain on the horizon.

The day's highs of 23°C didn't sound too bad, though, so I selected my linen-blend Zara skirt (Vix has its twin!) from my travel capsule and paired it with a charity shopped short-sleeved King Louie jumper.



My travel capsule also contained a selection of accessories, which have found the perfect home in this gorgeous patchwork washbag, a present from my lovely friend Claire. I just had to take a picture of it sitting on our balcony's railing and send it to her!

Seeing our plans for our trip to France thwarted once more, we opted for a visit to Ypres. Only twenty minutes up the road, the town has has plenty of wet weather options if needed. So, after breakfast, we kindly asked Truus, our Dutch-speaking Satnav, to take us the free car park at the town's station.

Although we've used this car park many times before, it just wasn't our lucky day. As all available spaces seemed to be taken, we started driving around in circles until a kind local directed us to another car park which admittedly she wasn't sure was still in use. According to her directions we would have to pass a level crossing, which strangely enough we never did. But then our patience finally paid off and we were able to park our car on a largely abandoned plot with weeds growing between its cobbles, where we joined a handful of other cars and some mobile homes. It had actually taken us longer to find parking space than it did to drive over to Ypres!



Crossing the road, we soon arrived at one of the entrances to the ramparts. These are among the best preserved in the country and now provide a green belt which garlands most of the historic town centre.

Although taking the main roads leading to the town centre would have taken us a mere 15 minutes or so, the 2,6 kilometer walk which meanders along the ramparts makes for a much more pleasant approach.

Almost instantly, remnants of the First World War can be found in a pair of British pillboxes, concrete structures with loopholes through which weapons could be fired. It is thought that the name "pillbox" derives from their similarity to the kind of circular cardboard box in which chemists of the time supplied pills.



Soon afterwards we came across the Peace Bridge. Opened in April 2023 and constructed from weathering steel, its guard rails are artistically embellished with the word "peace" in 86 languages: a statement of universal tolerance reinforcing Ypres’s message of peace.

The path then meanders past lakes and ponds, which are the remains of the moat, and the walk is an absolute delight: a perfect blend of nature and history, with the odd work of art thrown in.



Initially, the ramparts were little more than an earth wall with a moat. Later, stone walls and towers were added, until it was developed into a complex structure with bastions, advance redoubts, moats and walls.

In the photos (above, top left, and below, bottom left and right), Jos is standing on the edge of the Predikherentoren (Preacher's tower), which wasn't something vertigo-suffering me was quite comfortable with. 

If it doesn't look much like a tower, it's because in the French era both of the towers which were part of the 14th century Burgundian ramparts were lowered and transformed into artillery platforms.



A modern set of stone steps descends to the bottom of the tower. After having been closed off for many years, we were delighted to find the entrance gate once again opened to the public. You can spot a Lilliput yours truly (above, top left) snapped by Jos with his phone's camera. It's a good thing I'd had the presence of mind to wear a bright orange cardigan!



Idyllically situated on the banks of the moat is Ramparts War Cemetery, a small British cemetery where 198 Commonwealth soldiers, of which 188 are identified casualties, are resting.

From February 1915 to April 1918 Ramparts Cemetery was used by Commonwealth Forces. Most of the casualties buried here were killed in February, March and April and then in July and August of that year. The casualties from 1917 include a number of Australian and New Zealand soldiers.


This is just one of the literally hundreds of military cemeteries which arose in Flanders Fields after the First World War, reminding us of the staggering human toll the conflict took.


As always after having visited one of these moving sites, it was in a somewhat subdued frame of mind that we continued our walk. In these beautiful surroundings, however, nature soon managed to soothe our souls.

As we neared our destination, we came across the entrance to an ice house, a Madonna and Child in a cobwebbed shrine, a sculpture of Tibeert the cat and Reynaert the fox - characters from a major work of Middle Dutch literature dating from 1250 - and an Indian Memorial dedicated to the 130.000 troops of the Indian Forces who served in Flanders during the Great War. Oh, and there was a playful red squirrel too!



The Ramparts Route ends at the iconic Menin Gate, the sight of which always halts us in our tracks. This time, however, we were totally unprepared to see the Memorial covered in scaffolding. Designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield and unveiled on 24 July 1927, it is undergoing a two-year restoration programme, started in April 2023.

Here and here you can see what it looked like on some of our previous visits.




Having finally reached the town centre, our first priority was filling our rumbling stomachs and find a place to have lunch. Obviously, there's plenty of choice on and around the Market Place, but we opted for Café Les Halles, where we'd eaten on our last visit in September 2021. 


Popular with both tourists and locals on their lunch break, we needed to exercise patience as we had a rather long wait until our food arrived. This was somewhat redeemed, however, by our view of the newly renovated Cloth Hall, not to mention the fact that Jos's favourite alcohol free beer was on the menu.



After 18 months of renovations which were completed earlier this year, the front of the Cloth Hall can once again be admired in all its glory 

The Cloth Hall was built in the Gothic style in the 13th century and epitomised the wealth generated by the cloth industry that was heavily reliant on the wool trade with England. One of Europe's largest Gothic civil buildings, it served as a covered market and storage depot for Flemish cloth, a fabric prized across the continent.

The building - as in fact was most of the town - was completely destroyed during the First World War when the city stood at the heart of the Great War battlefields. It was rebuilt after the conflict and only completed as recently as 1967.  



She was a city of patience; of proud name,
Dimmed by neglecting Time; of beauty and loss;
Of acquiescence in the creeping moss.
But on a sudden fierce destruction came
Tigerishly pouncing: thunderbolt and flame
Showered on her streets, to shatter them and toss
Her ancient towers to ashes. Riven across,
She rose, dead, into never-dying fame.
White against heavens of storm, a ghost, she is known
To the world's ends. The myriads of the brave
Sleep round her. Desolately glorified,
She, moon-like, draws her own far-moving tide
Of sorrow and memory; toward her, each alone,
Glide the dark dreams that seek an English grave.

- Laurence Binyon, Ypres, 1918 - 




It was when we were proceeding towards the Cloth Hall after lunch that it started drizzling. We ducked inside the passage running under the Cloth Hall, emerging on the other side in front of the Gothic St. Maartenskathedraal (St. Martin's Cathedral). Admiring its soaring interior, it's almost impossible to believe that the church - which like the Cloth Hall was reduced to rubble after the war - was actually completely rebuilt in the 20th Century!


While Jos took a breather, me and my camera explored the church and marvelled at its glorious architectural details as well as the modern artwork which was on display.

The wrought iron sculpture, The Suffering Christ by local artist Adhémar Vandroemme (1917-2009) is particularly haunting and has received its permanent place here since Good Friday 2018.

I loved the row of angels - dating from 1934 but looking much older than their 90 years - with their dried flower headdresses, and was intrigued by the barrel on the top right. Holy water on tap, perhaps?



Outside the drizzle still continued so we made our way back to the Market Place and around the corner to the Ypres Museum, which had a temporary exhibition going on called Vrij, Vrolijk en Vunzig (transl. Free, Jolly and Filthy), lauded as a multifaceted discovery of the Middle Ages.


I thought the layout was rather confusing and, combined with the fact that it was quite warm and airless inside the venue, I'm afraid we rather rushed through.

It boggles my mind that one was able to walk at all and not trip up wearing those long pointed shoes, called poulaines. Apparently all the rage for men, they originated in the 13th century and reached extreme proportions in the 15th century. The points became longer while jackets got shorter. Poulaines were highly impractical and demonstrated that you were a man of leisure.

The object on the bottom left is the runner of a so-called jaw sledge for children, which was made by mounting a wooden board on the lower jawbone of a horse. 



The drizzle had turned into full-blown rain when we left the museum so any further plans for the day were shelved. Instead, we returned to the car park via the shortest route, hoping that our car would still be there. Much to our relief it was!


The weather gods, however, were having the last laugh that day, parting the clouds for a September sunset, illuminating the hop fields across the road and the hills across the border in France.

And look who was patiently waiting at the bottom of the stairs for her dinner!



22 comments:

  1. The work that went into rebuilding Ypres and other cities and towns that were destroyed was quite remarkable. They are such beautiful buildings.
    It's a shame the Ypres museum was muddled. There appear to be some astonishing artefacts there. I suppose the length of the poulaines increased with the importance of the wearer.

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  2. I'm happy to see your photos today. It really is a lot of work until a post is finished.
    The Zara skirt is beautiful, it fits the season so well. The wash bag is particularly pretty, the warm colors and the hanger, like amber.
    Wish you a very nice evening

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  3. That's a creative use for a horse's jaw. I suppose the shape simply suggested the use and someone thought, why not? The king of the cats story gets around, doesn't it? I had no idea how old it was, or where it originated.
    -Goody

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  4. I'm glad we don't live in the middle ages anymore. Dare I compare those shoes with today's finger nails? The longer, the "better"?

    xxx Regula

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  5. You are such a good guide for your own country! We really should explore Belgium more. What a beautiful buildings. That bag is amazing!!

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  6. I love your outfit. Gorgeous maxi skirt and the top with the leaf print is so lovely. I also like the pairing with the orange cardi. Blues and greens always look fabulous paired with orange.
    Shame how you weren't able to take that planned trip to France, but great that you two managed a visit to Ypres.
    From what I see, there's lots to see there.


    It's lovely were able to park your car in the park, despite some issues at the start...all is well that ends well. The park looks beautiful! I only now realized that the verb park and the noun park have the same form- funny how I never thought about it before. I have to look up the etymology of the world. Did first drivers park their cars in the city's parks? Is that how the verb park was made?

    Anyway, the first World War monuments are always very touching. Every war is brutal, but the conditions in the first world war were some of the worst ever experienced by army men. Most of those poor veterans had severe PTSD and/or shell shock and nothing was known about helping or curing trauma. Poor souls...how they must have suffered, both them and their families. Trauma is hard to bear, even with all the help from modern psychology- we can't phantom what it must have been for them, how isolated they must have felt.

    The cathedral of saint Martin looks very familiar. I feel like I might have watched a documentary about it before...or perhaps you already wrote about it on your blog? Those gorgeous sculptures look so familiar to me.

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  7. Firstly, I'm sorry you've had a stressful week. I can relate! Hope things have improved.
    I'm so glad you found the wash bag useful.
    The Ramparts Route was fascinating and sobering...I can think of a few leaders who need to spend a few moments on the Peace Bridge.
    The Suffering Christ sculpture is incredible, as are the 1930s angels. As for those pointy shoes, they are rather comical aren't they?
    Thanks for the cute kitty pic! xxx

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  8. thankfully mother nature does her wonders even on cruelest of man made places after a while........
    gorgeous photos from the cathedral too and i´m glad you managed to post them after having such a stressful time!
    hugs! xxx

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  9. I love your title for this post. Your patience was tested but still looks like a lovely day out. X

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  10. Sorry to hear about all your upsets but you still made the most of it. Lovely photos.

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  11. No pressure for you to ever post if you're not up for it, Ann, <3

    Loved the pics of Ypres - that's one of the places L wants to go when we do our Europe trip. Those long shoes are hilarious! And that fad lasted 2 centuries - not exactly fast fashion!

    That little cat is so sweet! How did you resist bringing her home?

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  12. I'm so sorry your week was stressful and you weren't feeling inspired. It is difficult when that happens. I'm glad you took the time you needed and decided to alter your self-imposed deadline. That Zara skirt is beautiful. I love the colours! That purse is extra beautiful! I just adore the pattern. How frustrating that all of the parking spaces were taken. I hate when that happens! I'm glad you were finally able to find a spot. What a beautiful area you were able to explore. The tower is so interesting! The town center sounds lovely, especially because there were lots of choices for food! I'm glad you had a good view and you were able to avoid the rain for at least some of the day.

    the creation of beauty is art.

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  13. Thank you for sharing your experience! It’s always tough when plans don’t go as expected, but it sounds like you managed to make the best of it. I can relate to that feeling of juggling deadlines and inspiration. If you’re interested in more travel tips and insights, feel free to check out my latest post on choosing unique bespoke engagement rings! You can read it here: https://www.melodyjacob.com/2024/09/how-to-choose-unique-bespoke-engagement-rings.html.

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  14. Interesting post. Thanks for sharing.
    I invite you to visit my last post. Have a good week

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  15. Sorry about your stressful time Ann. I used to worry about being late with my posts but have become more relaxed about it now.
    I so enjoyed your tour of Ypes it looks magnificent , I am in awe of the architecture.
    Hope this week is a good one.

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  16. You're making me consider another Belgian holiday!!! More comment later as I need to get off the train! Kxx

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  17. I'm back!!!!
    Sorry it has been stressful! I know your pain!
    Ypres looks super! I really fancy a visit!! The cathedral is beautiful.
    Really liking your outfits too!
    Glad the car was still there...
    Kezzie xx

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  18. That's how life works.
    I was away for four whole weeks and therefore not in blogland. But it's always nice to return.
    It's a real shame that you couldn't hold the France weekend. But it's great that you've found another goal. Thanks for the photos of Ypres.
    And your patchwork toiletry bag is a blast.
    Kind regards from Viola

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  19. It’s completely understandable; life can sometimes throw us unexpected curveballs that leave us feeling tired and uninspired. It’s great to hear that you were able to make some progress with your collages, even if it took longer than expected.

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  20. I love these pictures so much, these are pretty pieces of art and your maxi skirt is love. Wonderful Post! Have a great day!
    Rampdiary 

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  21. Hello skirt twin! I feel your pain with the photo editing. I can't transfer my camera photos to my phone any more to edit them and a Google update means the old editing suite on the PC no longer works, I feel like throwing the blessed thing out of the window!
    It's incredible how beautiful Ypres looks now despite the ugliness and tragedy of its past. xxx

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  22. Dear bloggerfriend, I totally understand you about missing some self-impossed deadline (I'm becoming an expert in it, life can be hectic sometimes!). Anyway, you know I love your collages and fabulous photos and appreciate all the effort they take!
    Looking lovely in that skirt and matchy floral top, so beautiful colours. Well done wearing an orange cardi, not only comfy but very Visible!.
    Always admiring how fantastic those rebuilt gothic buildings look, so amazing. .
    besos

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