Waiting for the rail bridge at Gouda to open |
The
smaller Dutch canals wind through fields, towns and villages. Often
they go past people's back gardens. Frequently we find the level of the
countryside either side of the canal is actually well below the water
level in the canal. These tidy Dutch houses with their elegant gardens
exist in an artificial world, depending entirely on dykes, locks and
water pumps.
In the afternoon we arrived at Braassemermeer, a large lake at the junction of several canals. The wide open space contrasts with the confined feel of the canals that we have become used to, and the water seems cleaner.
While here I cleaned out the engine cooling water filter, which had become partially choked with weed. Sometimes the murky canal water looks as though nothing much could grow in it, but the weed seems pretty resistant.