So we left Denmark and headed south. In between Denmark and Germany there was a car ferry which only took about 45 minutes but broke up the days journey quite nicely. We try to spend only 2-3 hours driving during the day and stay at least two nights so you can go and do something during the full day.
Our first stop was Lübeck which I remember clearly from when we visited in 1990. It’s a beautiful Hanseatic city with a lovely old town. We went for a big walk and enjoyed beers in the sun in the square. Next stop was Bremen (which I also clearly remember from our 1990 trip). I wanted to go and see the old town and the statue of the Musicians of Bremen.
The Brothers Grimm tale tells of a Donkey, a Dog, a Cat and a Rooster that decide to leave their farms and form a band of wandering musicians (as you do when you are a disgruntled farm employee). Along the way they convince a group of robbers that they are a horrible witch by standing on top of each other to form a strange shadow and then the Donkey kicks them, the Dog bites them, the Cat scratches them and the Rooster makes a horrible noise. They never actually made it to Bremen as they stayed in the robbers house but there’s a statue of them there anyway.
From Bremen we legged it into the Netherlands (who did not understand the assignment) and provided only one windmill, no tulips, no clogs and not one dike! Then down to just outside Dunkirk (which ended up being Belgium) for two nights. There we watched two movies about Dunkirk (including Dunkirk). Then on to the famous Dunkirk beach.
Almost 400 000 Brits and French were evacuated from there. Winston Churchill’s famous “We shall fight on the beaches” speech was informing parliament of what had happened there. What I didn’t know until we went there and did the research was that King Theobold of Belgium (who married Princess Astrid of Sweden, who later died in a car crash), had tried to remain neutral but couldn’t and so asked for British help to stop the Germans invading. Promptly after Churchill got everyone there and enlisted France’s support, King Theobold surrendered to Germany which left everyone stranded at Dunkirk (what a dick move).
So Churchill had to organise a way to get everyone out and it was easier to evacuate to UK than try to fight their way out against the Germans (don’t mention the war). Churchill was very angry about it though as he felt that retreat is not how you win the war. But praised his Air Force who were battling it out in the air with the Germans to try and protect the troops. The whole speech is actually a really good read if you ever get the chance.
From Dunkirk we took the ferry to Dover where Ed Sheeran had to learn how to drive on the left again. Drive on the left, drive on the left. We then had three very administratively and logistically challenging days preparing for the conscious uncoupling of Trailer Swift and Ed Sheeran. We had to pack and clean and drop all our stuff at Stefan’s in London, then get back to Southampton. It looked like such a big pile of stuff when we dropped it off and we did feel a bit bad about it. I’m not sure our cheerful “There’s heaps of things you can use Stefan” and our gift of three bottles of French rosé really made up for the mound of stuff on Stefan’s floor. But the next day Tetris Stefan had fitted it all into one cupboard neatly with “room to spare” he said. We do appreciate it Stefan
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Then a big driving day to drop Trailer Swift with the shipping company before heading back up north to sell Ed Sheeran back to the guy we bought him from. I have to admit I was truly sad to see them split up and genuinely sad leaving our happy little home for the past seven weeks all by herself in a UK shipping yard.
“Be good Trailer Swift, see you in New Zealand”.