Journey to Dordrecht

Aside from the doctor and staff at Bruges hospital, the folks at Tauck were really good to us by delaying the Wednesday evening sailing from Antwerp so we could make it back to the ship. Literally, we had just taken our first few steps into the reception area when the captain gave the order to cast off and we were underway for an approximate 8 hour trip to Dordrecht. This is a small city built on some islands with rural area nearby.
Weather was quite gray with drizzle and 15 degree temps. We skipped the morning tour to see nearby windmills opting to go for a stroll in the old town in the afternoon. A 20 minute walk brought us to the museum which was formerly the home of a prominent lawyer and businessman. When he died in 1922, he gave his large home to a historical society that operates it to this day. Kind of interesting; it's pretty much as he left it at the end of his life. Very heavy furniture, drapery so quite dark inside. Prior to entering the museum, we stopped next door to view a collection of mangled chunks of metal - war wreckage of a Landcaster bomber that crashed in the town only a few hundred meters from where we stood. We went into the small adjacent WW2 museum in which the first exhibit was a replica jeep with mannequins dressed as Canadian soldiers from some Saskatchewan regiment. Kinda cool. The Canadian army liberated Dordrecht on May 8 almost 80 years ago.
Around 5:30, we boarded buses for a private tour of the Mauritshuis gallery in The Hague. Their prize item is Vermeer's Girl with the pearl earing.
Many other artworks as well. Dinner followed in an adjacent salon with music provided by a string trio - very classy!
We were back to the ship around 11 so a longer day versus usual. 

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