Monday, February 05, 2007

Day 209: I Am Sufficiently Recovered To Remember Wild Aquatic Chickens

Regular readers will be aware of the work of Saturday, which consisted of an accidental 50km journey on a bicycle originally created in 1904 to undertake journeys of no more than 200 feet. Suffice to say my companion and I were exhausted upon our return, and could barely speak for up to and including ten minutes.

Excitingly, however, later that day my companion - a cretin, if I am to be frank, with an enormously large head - re-did his original calculations and announced that our journey had in fact been closer to 55km. This is enormously impressive, whatever way you look at it. If you are still not impressed, try this! 55km is the equivalent of:

34.17 miles
29.67 nautical miles
55,000,000 millimetres
60,148.73 yards.

If you remain unmoved even by those astonishing facts, consider (if you will) that it was undertaken by me (porky, but not unattractive) and my companion, whose huge head sometimes makes it hard for him to balance properly.

But enough of this chat of enormous athleticism! We saw sights on our travels and it is those that I want to tell you about! For example, before I had even left the canal upon which I live in my foreign 'apartment', the local Monkey-Fashioner revealed two further artistic works, Porno Dog and Gaping Fish:













































































A glimpse to the left revealed further delights: this lady looks with some delight upon Floating Spacehopper - but where are her arms? Were they taken off so she would not bounce away from the barge, leaving her owner bereft?



















A short bicycle ride later, and we had embarked upon what can only be described as an Epic Journey: from behind the railway station to Amsterdam North, using a ferry as our transport. As the ferry pulled away from the shore I turned to find the most delightful of Dutchmen. "Let me take your photograph!", he cried into the wind, observing me pointing at my companion's head and laughing. "OK", I said, "If it will make you happy! But only if I can take YOUR photograph in return." "We are not TOGETHER", he said, indicating his companion; "but we ARE going to the North to play tennis!". "No, WE are not together either", I muttered, looking pityingly at my companion, "and neither are we going to play tennis".

I stop briefly and look out across the water, thinking wistfully of Canada. (If the self-haircutting pathologist had been there, I would have pointed at him and said, "Yes! WE are together, and WE are going to play Scrabble!") But I snap out of my delicious reverie, look at the Dutchman's hat and say: "but don't let that stop you; you take our photograph, and we will take yours!"

I took his photograph. He said I could do it on the condition that his picture would not appear on the internet because he was "famous in a way". Hey ho. Sorry about that. Lovely chap: still no idea who he is!




















From the ferry through the Dutch equivalent of Hemel Hempstead; from there through flat fields with heron and big hairy pigs. And then, finally, a "coffee break", where my companion eats a densely-packed confection in the shape of the ancient Greek Hippodrome and I nibble delicately upon a counterfeit Lincoln Biscuit (counterfeit as although it LOOKS just like a Lincoln biscuit, it is utterly delicious and made mainly of butter and almonds, unlike the rubbish real Lincoln biscuit).






















Fuelled by our splendid biscuits and really quite ghastly coffee, we bicycle onwards. We see tiny houses made of wood. I fail to brake and end up mounting a staircase. We see ducks and two swan. My companion (who, as I may already have mentioned, is a cretin), claims that there is a thing called a "wild aquatic chicken"*, and that we have seen many of them.

I ignore him and pedal onwards. Eventually we arrive in a strange place filled mainly with Delftware clogs and chips. We are stopped suddenly in our tracks by the promise of some authentic Dutch photography. "Step inside!", beckons the sign. "We will Costume You, and Take Your Photographe!". I resist, despite the obvious temptation:



































Following a quite astonishingy unpleasant luncheon made of dogfish and four week old mayonnaise, we begin our long bicycle back to Amsterdam, which is smoking on the distant horizon. For some reason I still cannot fathom, my companion insists on bicycling behind me, singing "fat-bottomed girls make the rockin' world go round."

I once again fail to brake and end up in a hedge, having swerved to avoid an oncoming Nissan. My enormous-headed companion finds this funny until he sees that I am crying with real water from my eyes. "I NEARLY DIED", I sob, "and you ... DON'T CARE." "Never mind!" he squeaks (his voice is high like a girl's, despite his enormous head), "have a cup of tea and biscuit!" I recover immediately.

Twenty five kilometres later, we reach the ferry back to Amsterdam, whereupon we laugh until we are home.












I spend the following afternoon on the sofa eating very old Gouda and reading The Cow Who Fell In The Canal. A horse called Pieter is telling a cow called Hendrika that in Amsterdam, "...the streets are made of cobblestones and the houses have staircases on their roofs. People ride bicycles." I get off the sofa and look out of the front door. He appears to be right!


* Has anyone else heard of wild aquatic chickens? Apparently there are many in Norfolk. I find the whole idea frankly preposterous.

30 comments:

Anonymous said...

Funny stuff, but I feel I have to tell you about a factual error contained within your post.

In your piece about Lincoln you say it is not made from butter and almonds. I would direct your attention to the ancient Butter and Almond quarter of the city (though now sadly reduced to an 8th due to tourists eating the buildings). It is a world heritage site now and protected from hungry passers-by.
The architecture is still quite lovely though (if a little stale)...with a coffee.

:)

Anonymous said...

congratulations on your epic journey but more importantly, how did Hendrika fall in the canal and was she rescued? By Floating Spacehopper perhaps?

Anonymous said...

C'mon everyone, identify the (no, any) 'famous in a way' Dutchman. It's your duty.

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Fatman. Thank you. Have you eaten a Lincoln biscuit recently? One bought in the shop? It is not a delicious, buttery, almondy affair. What fact are you correcting?

Buttons - she was fine. She fell into a raft thing, floated down the canal, got pulled out of the raft by a couple of boys, rushed round Amsterdam sniffing bicycles, got found by her owner, went back to the country in the back of a cart drawn by Pieter the horse, and ended her days eating grass and wearing a straw hat.

MF: Hieronymus Bosch, M C Escher, Rembrant, Mondrian, Vermeer, van Gogh. Dick Bruna wot wrote Miffy. Loads and loads of explorers. The Princes of Orange (and Nassau). Erasmus. Hugo Grotius. Spinoza. And that's without thinking too hard. It's the Luxembourgeois you have to worry about.

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Rembrandt I mean. The Belgians. That's the best game. All together now: Herge, Simenon, Plastic Bertrand ...

apprentice said...

Those rear pedalling brakes are flipping lethal, they're the Dutch answer to WMD clearly!

Was the big-headed chap thinking of the humble moorhen, or perhaps the coot?

That poor cow! She's an Ayrshire cow, and clearly lost

Anonymous said...

...The horrible Jaques Brel on whom my french teacher had a disturbing crush and a large collection of posters. Rene Magritte famous for being the bloke in the Paul Simon song. Artists Jan van Eyck, Pieter Brueghel the Elder, Peter Paul Rubens and probably veteran multitasker Dick van Dyke but I may have to check that.

Anonymous said...

I'd wager on this fellow.

Johnny Boy esq., P.I.
"For All Your Dutch Informational Needs"

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Apparently he is Qutie The Thing over here!

Here is a song he did about a rabbit.

He is definitely funnier than Benny Hill, even in Dutch, which I do not (yet) understand!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dAd11wF3Q1c

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

I meant here, of course.

Anonymous said...

Wow! Baby in a basket! Isn't it amazing what you can buy in Holland?

And of course there's no need for you to be Costumed and Photographed, for you are already...hey, what happened to your True Likeness? Show Me The Monkey!

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Monkey is back. There has been some random action going on. I am not sure what. Just random.

You know.

Anonymous said...

Fang Q.

Anonymous said...

Biscuit of the week 2/6/2002

http://www.nicecupofteaandasitdown.com/biscuits/previous.php3?item=20

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Fatman: I do apologise; there was a small typo that might have suggested that the biscuit in question was pretending to look like Lincoln itself, rather than a Lincoln biscuit. I am weary, and apologise again.

monkeymother said...

Poor Monkeydada - he does know there are famous Dutchmen - he just wondered whether anyone could identify this particular Dutchman. (It's hard using a keyboard when you can only get one hand out of the straitjacket.)

P.S. So glad Dutchmonkey is back in all her glory.

Z said...

There are moorhens in Norfolk, but I think that they are not true chickens. There are also wild chickens that live on a roundabout (which is called Chicken Roundabout; Google it if you doubt me) but that is all.

Anonymous said...

Thanks, this is hilarious! And speaking of scrabble, your writing teems with bingo words!

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Poor Monkeydada, I fear I may have leapt on him rather, surprised at his apparent and inexplicable distain of the Dutch!

Anon - does it? Couldn't work out what you were getting at from the link. Thank you for your kind words.

Z - he did keep saying Moorhens at me over and over and over, as if I were mad, but then he said 'wild aquatic chickens' again and again, as if it were the most obvious thing to say rather than Moorhen! A Moorhen I understand! A wild aquatic chicken? That is STILL PREPOSTEROUS.

Anonymous said...

I love the Dutch, wassa matter? I just wanted to know who the 'famous in a way' mysterious man on the boat was.

NON-WORKINGMONKEY said...

Yes I know! Re-read my last comment please, do not lift your finger from the screen otherwise you may lose your place! You knows it. In it I am apologising for having misinterpreted your earlier comment which I thought was odd as I know you love the Dutch.

Anonymous said...

Loving the Dutch experience!!!

Nuala

Anonymous said...

still a thing of joy!!!

Nuala

Anonymous said...

Well the guy in the picture is definately not Youp van het Hek. How did you come up with that Jonny? Is Youp famous in Norfolk?? The Flappie song is quite funny. About a little boy who can't find his rabbit and his parents keep distracting him till after diner when they confess they just ate him.
I don't know who the man in the picture is. So he can't be too famous.
And the wild aquatic chicken? Doesn't he just mean ducks? Is the cretin Dutch? Maybe his English isn't that good?

Anonymous said...

I just thought both guys looked uncannily like aquatic chickens.

Anonymous said...

I OWNED THAT BOOK! I OWNED THAT BOOK! I DID I DID I DID!!!!...

sorry... bit over excited on seeing a book I had when little. (i was little once, you know).

Rob said...

The Chicken Roundabout looks fun. Thank you Z.

Anonymous said...

I don't even know what to say after this (I'm somewhat drained, much as you were after your 55km ride) but it was THRILLING, I tell you! Highlights included: gaping fish, space hopper chick and your weird friend with the large head. I am disappointed however that you did not take the opportunity to dress up as a proper Dutch. That I would like to see.

Anonymous said...

err... my point? err.. Butter. Almonds. Something...joke like. No offence meant. Just, Lincoln biscuit, like a city made of biscuit.

I'm sorry.
Hang my head in shame!

Anonymous said...

Stop it. You are making me want to live in Amsterdam. And eat biscuits made out of almonds and butter. And put a silly hat on my head. And why-oh-why-oh-why can't we have a photo of the man with the huge head?

Which reminds me of a quote from a popular American feel-good sitcom thingy: "Huge head huge head HUGE HEAD!"

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