Medicine Hat News

Staying above water

Sleeping on a classic houseboat while in Amsterdam is a very Dutch thing to do

- STEVE MACNAULL

Channellin­g my inner Amsterdamm­er, I sleep in a canal boat and then cycle in the rain.

It’s all part of making my visit to the Dutch capital as authentic, and unique, as possible.

I've been to Amsterdam before and stayed at DoubleTree, which is a very nice chain hotel with well-located properties.

But this time around, I yearned for the quintessen­tially quirky and the delightful­ly Dutch.

Officially, I’m in Amsterdam to drop by Booking.com headquarte­rs and learn more about the wildly successful website that’s helped more than one billion people rent vacation and business trip accommodat­ion.

Most of that activity is naturally hotel rooms.

But, Booking.com also has 29 other types of accommodat­ion in its inventory of 25 million bookable units worldwide, from tree houses, apartments and safari tents to country villas, resorts and igloos.

So, in an ode to being in canal-andboat-crazy Amsterdam and it being the company’s hometown, I, of course, utilize the site to secure the canal boat.

There are 80 different canal boats available for rent on the website.

I choose the elegant Prinsenboo­t on the famous Prinsengra­cht canal lined with shops, restaurant­s and those distinctiv­e 17th century tall houses.

The former barge has been converted into three comfortabl­e and modern nautical-style suites.

It’s so soothing to sleep in the cushy bed while the water laps against the vessel and later sip a Heineken on the deck with a canal and tall house view.

My choice of Holland’s best-known beer is again a nod to location and context.

Back in her barge days, Prisenboot used to haul grain to the Heineken Brewery on the nearby Singelgrac­ht canal.

Today, Prinsenboo­t is firmly moored as a holiday home.

It doesn’t even have a motor anymore.

To amp up my Amsterdam experience, I decide to hop on a rented bike to cycle the seven blocks and five canals and bridges to my appointmen­ts. But, it’s spitting rain outside. All the locals continue to cycle undaunted, so I join them.

Luckily, my rented wheels is a sturdy, single-gear, no-nonsense model with ample fenders so I don’t get splashed up the back by the liquid sunshine.

Nonetheles­s, I show up at the company’s trendy offices in the historic former Dutch National Bank building on Herengrach­t slightly damp and dishevelle­d.

Upon my arrival I discover most of the 1,700 who work there cycle to work because it’s the most efficient way to get around.

In a compact city centre with little parking for cars and criss-crossed with canals and narrow street, the bike is king.

There is, however, space beside the canal for row upon row of parked bikes as far as the eye can see.

Even high-powered, multi-millionair­e Booking.com CEO Gillian Tans cycles to work, dropping her kids at school along the way.

When I catch up with Tans she’s happy to hear I've cycled there and I’m staying in a canal boat booked on the site.

“Our company mandate is to empower people to experience the world,” she says.

“In your case, it’s a very Dutch experience for you today.”

On my previous trip to Amsterdam, I did the requisite Red Light District, marijuana coffeehous­e, Edam cheese, wooden shoes and flower market tour.

Thus, this visit allowed me more time to hang out on the canal boat, take a sightseein­g Kinboat canal tour while enjoying a Heineken and discover the foodie side of Amsterdam.

There were memorable meals of Dutch comfort food at De Vergulden Eenhoorn, a restaurant in a recommissi­oned circa 1702 dairy barn; fresh seafood canal side at Scheepskam­eel; and nouveau Italian at Bussia.

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