Bart Van Vliet runs the Holland Sugar Art show every year, usually around May, but
this year due to the Telford International, he delayed it a few weeks. The
venue was also changed as there were more stands and more visitors than in
previous years. This is good for all, obviously, and we both take pleasure in
being welcomed back each year by Frankie's many fans, and the friends we have
acquired over the years.
With
the larger venue came a new area- Boskoop instead of Alphen - but Holland is a beautiful
country, especially when you leave the motorways, and seeing new towns and
hamlets is a great experience. We both love the countryside very much as it
appears to be a well maintained country, clean, tidy and picturesque. The Dutch
take pride in their houses, gardens, towns and cities. If life is a book,
then travelling gets you off page one and I sincerely believe that if it's
expansion of the mind you want, journeys abroad will provide it for
you.
This year we were joined by quite a large British
contingent including Alan Dunn, Karen Davies, Edable
Art, Georgie Godbolt, Sunflower Sugar Art, Celcakes and A Piece Of
cake.
The Dutch Traders were also there in number including
our very good friends from Mjam Taart, Ellen's Cakes and Cakes by Bien. It
was fantastic to catch up and to spend the rare idle moments of the weekend
nattering and sharing a coffee.
We always look forward to our Dutch trips; we have many friends in Holland but our especial
friends are Renita and Patrick with whom we stay whenever we can. They make us
incredibly welcome and are very good to us in such a genuine manner that is
much more European than British in its palpability.
But over the years we have
met these others who appear to look as forward to our visit as do we -some
traders and some customers - but the one thing about the Dutch that I
particularly admire is their certitude, their strength of character hidden
within the natural and honest attitude they have to others.
They are a forthright
people as a whole - a nation of seafarers and conquerors too, remember - and
some interesting discussions take place over a bottle of wine. The European
perspective is sometimes vastly different to that of the British and makes for
a lively and intriguing debate.
I am often surprised by the
European mindset. It reminds me of a joke by the German comedian Henning Venn;
“The British are not sure if they should be part of Europe ? - Get a mep!"
But the generosity of the
Dutch never fails to amaze me. There were some very nice Indonesian Dutch
ladies at a show in Apeldoorn a year or two ago who had a young newly born boy,
Adam, and we got into a conversation about babies in general as my daughter was
expecting my first grandchild at the time. Six months later when we turned
up to an Exhibition in Saint Nicklaas in Belgium, they surprised me to tears by
handing me two boxes of presents for Laura-Anne my daughter and her new son,
not yet born, Elijah. We hardly knew them and certainly had not done anything
for them other than striking up a friendship that was mutual in its distribution
of favour.
This time, Bien and Tirza from
Cakes By Bien, handed us a bag of Dutch goodies for no apparent reason other
than that we had a lot of fun with them both in Dublin earlier this year and
struck up a deeper friendship than previously. We certainly learned a lesson in
appreciation from our Dutch friends and their attitude to friendship. A
wonderful weekend and we look forward to October and our return.
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