Bed & Breakfast Decrop Brugge
Colettijnenhof 5 Brugge, West Flanders, 8000, Belgium
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Travel Blogs by Travelers Who Stayed at this B&BBed & Breakfast Decrop Brugge
Europe 2007 Jour 4 - 5
Brugge, patrimoine mondial de l'Unesco, quelle ville superbe pleine d'histoire et aussi surnommé la Venise du nord, avec raison. Cet endroit se visite à pied s.v.p. et il faut prendre le temps d'admirer la beauté de cette jolie ville historique. Plusieurs cathédrales, 13 ou 14 si je me souviens bien dont une en particulier qui regorge de reliques …
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Kortrijk
... 1815-1830), Belgium gained independence. The industrial revolution increased the pace of infrastructure development: the railway and the canal Bossuit-Kortrijk had to secure the supply of raw materials. However, in the 19th century the Kortrijk region - in common with the rest of Flanders - remained a poor region. As a result, part of the population emigrated to the industrialized regions in Northern France or even to North America.
The ...
From "Flander's fields" to Westvleteren
... beer phone, you have to give personal information, including the license plate number to your car. One is then given a date and time at which you must be at the front gate of the abbey to purchase the beer. It is strictly forbidden to be resold and after you purchase your two case limit, the same car or phone number cannot purchase again for another sixty days. All of these measures are only because there is a small amount of beer ...
This is one city I will visit again
... I just strolled back and forth across, sometimes stopping to take pictures, sometimes stopping for coffee or a beer and to read. You can feel the vibe of all the good people. You can see it in their facial expressions and their body language. There are hundreds of bikes in town and not one is locked up. No one is afraid of anyone walking out on their tab at restaurants. Everyone is genuinely happy and enjoying ...
In Flanders Fields the poppies grow..
... grand memorial to 55000 British/Commonwealth soldiers that died in battle but have no known graves. The gate stands above the houses all around and is one of the main entrances to the town, an entry across the water that surrounds the inner town and a route used by the soldiers out of Ypres onto the salient into battle. Once again, it was very sobering right up until the point when a group of lads drove through the gate wearing Arab gowns, with pastelled ...



