Tine's Guesthouse
Zwaluwenstraat 11, Brugge
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Tine's Guesthouse Brugge

Zwaluwenstraat 11 Brugge, West Flanders, 8000, Belgium

Travel Blogs by Travelers Who Stayed at this B&BTine's Guesthouse Brugge

Beautiful Bruges

A travel blog entry by justjosking

3
41

So here we are in Amsterdam after a busy but very enjoyable few days in Bruges. We stayed in a great little B&B, just a short stroll into the busy market square, but unfortunately the internet was a little like the weather... a bit unpredicatable, hence the first blog now!

So here we go...

Day 1 saw us with a very early start …

Travel Blogs Nearby

Kortrijk

A travel blog entry by sklitgord

12

... 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

A travel blog entry by forthestory

3
17

... around. When the beer phone line is open it is common for the monks to get 12,000 calls for orders. That is calls for 24,000 cases a day and only 60,000 are produced in one year.

The monks are most humble and produce just enough beer to give them money to survive and much goes to their community. They are so very good to their community and are generous men; I know this because I was lucky enough to have stayed as a guest ...

This is one city I will visit again

A travel blog entry by forthestory

10

... 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..

A travel blog entry by martinandkate

15

... into this I have also found that it could mean adding weight to the grave to keep the souls in check and at peace or to show that the person is still one of God's 'sheep' (A shepherd would count his sheep using pebbles in a sling, one pebble for each sheep).
Its been a long time since the Great War but for me this well kept, well tended cemetary shows the respect that those lost will always deserve. This cemetary contains 12000 burials, with many ...