We spent a few days in Belgium last week with our friends Jan and Paul, former neighbors from Virginia. They flew to Amsterdam and spent a few days there and then met us in Brussels. We spent one night there and then two in Bruges followed by two more in Ghent before returning with them to Lille for a couple more days. We had travelled with them in Belgium previously so it was fun to return to some of our favorite places there and it was nice to show them a bit of our new life in France. Bailey went to her camp for the time we were away and from the pictures we saw and the report when we returned, she had a good time.
This is Bailey's cottage. Note the air conditioner unit. I'm pretty sure they could have rented out these spaces to people during the recent heat wave. Note also the height and security of the fencing. That was why I felt comfortable leaving Bailey there the first time. The play yard fences aren't quite as tall, but there's a taller fence around the perimeter of the property.
One of the big play yards at the boarding facility.
Brussels
Jan and Paul at the Duveloreum, overlooking the grand place in Brussels.
Studying the beer book in a bar.
Cantillon, in Brussels, is a place of pilgrimage for beer lovers.
The gayborhood in Brussels.
Brussels at night.
Bruges
At The Trappist in Bruges.
This church/museum had the best signs. See that thing at the right? You can turn it to read the information in six different languages, including English.
They had opened up the floor in the church to display painted crypts.
In Bruges, the center sculpture is the only piece of Michelangelo's work to leave Italy during his lifetime.
The canals are gorgeous.
Bruges at night
This was a video mapping show displayed on the bellfort in Bruges. It told the history of the city and was very interesting. You could call up an audio file on your phone that provided an English translation from the Dutch. It didn't start until 10:45 at night, after it got dark.
Ghent
The most impressive parts of most churches, for me, is not the altar but the lectern, like this one in the cathedral in Ghent.
This Ghent cathedral is now really more museum than church, and they charge admission to see the good stuff, like these medieval wall paintings.
A reliquary for the head of John the Baptist.
This is the tomb of Hubert van Eyck, the first painter of the Ghent altarpiece. It was finished by his younger brother Jan van Eyck.
This is the Ghent altarpiece. It was featured in the movie The Monuments Men. It was undergoing restoration when I was last in Ghent so I had never seen it.
Another picture of the lectern in Saint Bavo's cathedral in Ghent.
We did a morning boat ride on the canals in Ghent.
Going through a canal tunnel.
The lectern in another church in Ghent.
Back in Lille
The Napoleon bridge at night.
There are tango lessons followed by dancing in the center of the old bourse in Lille on Sunday evenings.
Jan and Paul accompanied Bailey and I on our morning walks when they were in town. She enjoyed showing them her woods.
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