When we last met, I talked about Antwerp. However, this was only stop one of three in that wonderfully weird country of Belgium where they like to go hundreds of days at a time without a functioning Government.
This was a 30 minute train ride from Antwerp and sits very much in the middle of Antwerp, Brussels and the biggest tourism hotspot in Belgium: Bruges. Consequently, it has been somewhat ignored by tourists who tend to bypass it completely. This is rather unfortunate as Ghent is a truly lovely city to visit.
My first night there I stayed in a hostel called Ecohostel Andromeda, which was actually a canal boat. The owners lived on board as well it appeared, were complete hippies and super friendly. We were served freshly baked bread and other organic goodies for breakfast. It was a shame that I could only stay there one night. The other two nights were at a converted Monastery. It was not so good as the building was very tired and the walls paper thin. That said, BEST shower in Europe so I can't complain too much.
Some of the highlights are the Castle, called the Gravensteen, which has been there for several hundred years. You can do a self-guided tour, which wasn't too bad. The castle has a lovely history as a place were people were imprisoned, tortured and killed in a variety of interesting ways. There are two churches and a watch tower on the main thoroughfare through the township that one can view. I didn't as they weren't that interesting architecturally. The streets are all cobbled, and a river runs through the town. There are also a few canals around that are quite beautiful to behold.
For eating, there were an abundance of restaurants and cafes. But, just out of the town centre and away from the tourist eateries, was Sleepstraat. This is the main street in the Turkish district and it is lined with fabulous Turkish restaurants. When you see the Turks eating there, you know it's going to be good. I certainly enjoyed mine.
All in all, Ghent was a beautiful, somewhat sleepy town but well worth the visit as there weren't too many tourists around the place. Though maybe go during May/June as this is when the 65,000+ uni students aren't there and before the Turks leave for 2 months to go back to Turkey for a holiday.
Stop Three: A Day in Bruges.
One word, actually not really a word but a sound: AAAAARRRRGGGHH!
The two touristy things I did were to see the Madonna (if I didn't know it was a Michelangelo, I would have considered it boring) and a trip to the top of the Belfry, which I think a guy fell off in the movie, and also put me off spiral staircases forever. I got so dizzy going up and down. Also, the wait time was AGES!
In conclusion Ghent was a lovely town, Bruges also but the latter was insanely full of people so if anyone ever goes there to visit, bear that in mind. In case you are wondering, Bruges is about 20 minutes from Ghent by train.
After a tiki-tour through charming Belgium, it was off to Paris. But that is another post...