AMSTERDAM Canal Cruise 4K, The Netherlands
AMSTERDAM Canal Cruise 4K, The Netherlands
Canal Motorboats Rent a boat Amsterdam
Rent a boat and explore the Amsterdam canals with friends and family, on your own time and pace.
Pedal Boat - Canal Tours Amsterdam | Stromma NL
Get on a Pedal Boat and explore Amsterdam in a unique way. Create your own route and tour the canals at your own pace. This is the most fun and active way to explore the city.
For tickets, check out our website:
Amsterdam - Canal Life (HD)
A video I took while in Amsterdam of a large taxi tour boat doing a u-turn maneuver in the busy canal. Quite an art to behold. Love the Netherlands!!
Canal Motorboats Boot Huren Amsterdam - Rent a Boat Amsterdam
Rent A Boat Amsterdam:
The best way to see the Canals and all the great thingsAmsterdam has to offer.
Rent a boat at Canalmotorboats and have the ultimate Amsterdam experience.
Allmost a quarter of Amsterdam is made out of waterways, so take your own electric rental boat and cruise the Canals at your own time and paste.
Bring your own food and have an amazing time with family and friends, when you rent a boat at Canalmotorboats everyone will have the time of their lives.
Book your boat now before the summer is over again.
Boot Huren in de prachtige Amsterdam Grachten.
De grachten van Amsterdam, worden niet voor niets het 'Venetië van het Noorden' genoemd, bij Canal motorboats kunt u een boot huren en de prachtige grachten van Amsterdam bewonderen.
De Amsterdamse grachten staan niet zomaar op de Unesco werelderfgoed lijst. Amsterdam bestaat voor een kwart uit water en er zijn meer dan genoeg historische en moderne bezienswaardigheden.
Amsterdam is de ideale stad om samen met je familie of vrienden een boot te huren en al dat moois te bezichtigen. Proef de Amsterdamse sfeer vanaf het water en geniet van de historische binnenstad met zijn mooie grachten en sierlijke bruggen.
Een boot huren in Amsterdam en gelijk de grachten op, vanaf de centraal gelegen verhuurlocatie aan de Zandhoek.
Boot Huren Amsterdam!
canalmotorboats.com
Amsterdam, Out of Control - Netherlands HD Travel Channel
During the Boat Parade at Koninginnendag in the Netherlands, Amsterdam is out of control.
At the Eenhoomsluis, the children fasten sweets on a fishing rod and the crews of the passing boats have to pick these up with the mouth. This causes a jam and a chaos before the lock.
Only with great skill, the skipper can maneuver through this traffic chaos. However, everyone remains calm and happy and enjoys the fun.
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please read more:
Während der Boat Parade am Koninginnendag in den Niederlanden gerät Amsterdam „Out of Control“.
Kinder befestigen bei der Eenhoomsluis Süßigkeiten an einer Angel und die Besatzungen der passierenden Boote sollen diese mit dem Mund aufschnappen. Dies verursacht einen Stau und ein Verkehrschaos vor der Schleuse.
Die Bootsführer können sich nur mit großem Geschick durch dieses Chaos manövrieren. Dennoch bleiben alle gelassen und fröhlich und genießen den Spaß.
..........
Weitere Infos im Reisevideoblog:
We Live on a Houseboat in the Canals of Amsterdam!! /// WEEK 77 : Netherlands
Hello from the Netherlands! We were so excited to visit Amsterdam and it didn't disappoint. We stayed at a charming Airbnb that was a houseboat in the canals!
We loved cruising around Amsterdam and other nearby towns like Delft, Haarlem and Leiden on bikes. The kids ate their weight in stroopwafels and we're outfitted by the adorable kids brand, Gray Label. Garrett took Dorothy on a Daddy-Dottie date to the Netherlands vs Denmark women's soccer game.
The biggest highlight was our meet-up hosted at A'DAM tower. We are so grateful for everyone who came and showed their support. We are humbled by the kindness and love that everyone showed our family.
Happy Travels,
The Bucket List Family
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USEFUL LINKS
Our exact Airbnb in Amsterdam :
A'DAM Tower :
Gray Label :
Stromma Boat Tours :
Black Bikes Rental :
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Leiden, Netherlands canal boat tour
Leiden is one of the great cities of the Netherlands. In this segment on Leiden we’re taking you on a canal boat tour. It's a great way to get an overview of the city while sitting and relaxing for an hour and watching the historic buildings glide by. They say Leiden has more canals than any other Dutch city besides Amsterdam. They extend for 28 kilometers within the inner-city and are crossed by 88 bridges, some of which are quite low so you gotta keep your head down when you go beneath them/ It has all of those historic and pictorial charms that you would hope for in a quaint Dutch town -- a city of canals, pedestrian zones, historic buildings and bicycles -- in many ways a typical Dutch town but in others, something quite special. It has the oldest university in the Netherlands with 30,000 students among the 120,000 city population. One of the oldest cities of the country founded about 1000 years ago but with a young population and so many things for the visitor to see and do you could easily spend a couple of days here: drop in on some of its 200 restaurants, 60 bars, thousand shops, many along the pedestrian lanes, explore historic monuments such as this elaborate gatehouse through the medieval wall, one of two surviving gates from the old days, get educated and entertained at one of the half-dozen important museums and stay in one of the 22 hotels offering 3000 rooms.
Leiden is located just 40 minutes away from Amsterdam by train, or 20 minutes away from the airport by direct train -- easy to reach yet like many Dutch cities it's overlooked by most of those millions of visitors to Amsterdam who rarely venture beyond that big city. They're missing out on a lot that the Netherlands has to offer as will be showing you in our series.
The route that we will be taking in our one hour boat tour goes through some of the most beautiful of the canals of the city in a big loop and then coming back to where we started.
I was lucky to take what turned out to be a private tour. Well, nobody else showed up for the departure and Tim very gallantly said okay let's go and took me on a one hour boat ride. He works with a very special boat tour company that relies on 60 volunteers to do most of the driving and guiding. A lot of retirees and other interested residents of Leiden pitch in and help out.
The boat company is De Leidse Rederij at
Amsterdam's canals: a video guide
Amsterdam's canals: a video guide
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Marc Paping owns a small, solar-powered boat and lives on a house boat in Amsterdam. He shows us some of the hidden waterside gems that the big tour-boats avoid, from 18th-century almshouses offering peace and quiet in the middle of the tourist hubbub to a disused shipyard-turned-arts centre -- and explains why Amsterdam is not the Venice of the north.
AMSTERDAM CANAL CRUISE 2019
Amsterdam, the financial and cultural capital of the Netherlands is world renowned for its vast labyrinth of criss-crossing canals and waterways contributing to city's fame as a picturesque and romantic place, often nicknamed as the Venice of the North.
Amsterdam has more than one hundred kilometers of canals, about 90 islands and 1,500 bridges.
The 17th-century canal ring area, including the Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht and Jordaan, were listed as Unesco World Heritage Site in 2010.
For first time visitors taking a cruise throughout the canals and admiring the beautiful architecture and buildings is one of the highlights of their visit to Amsterdam. The cruise lasts 1 hour, costs Eur 11 and information is provided in several languages.
AMSTERDAM CITY TOUR:
Park Inn by Radisson Amsterdam Sloterdijk:
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#amsterdam #amsterdamcanals #amsterdamcanalcruise
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Vexento - I love mondays
Canal cruises in Amsterdam, busy at the 7 bridges :-)
Canal Boat Rentals in Holland Haarlem
A boating holiday is the best way to see Holland, Haarlem, Amsterdam, Utrecht, Gouda or even Rotterdam
Cruising Holland's canals
Al and Beth enjoy a cruise in the waterways of Holland, with Nick and Jan aboard their boat KUAH.
A Dutch Treat: Amsterdam canal cruise
I call this nothing short of a dream come true! The cruise was just as I had imagined... and even more. Thank you, Lord!
Newbie Dutch Skipper Crashes Tour Boat into other Tour Boat
This footage was taken on a professional tour boat excursion in Amsterdam, Holland. The Skipper was clearly in over her head on one of her first days. Actual footate of several mishaps and crashes, including a head on collision with another larger tour boat. The Skipper was priceless and she made for quite the entertaining afternoon. We miss her already...
AMSTERDAM, EXPLORING the fascinating floating homes (BARGES) in the CANALS
SUBSCRIBE: - Barges, canals, Amsterdam: A tour of the barges in the canals of Amsterdam (The Netherlands). Amsterdam is the Netherlands’ capital, known for its artistic heritage, elaborate canal system and narrow houses with gabled facades, legacies of the city’s 17th-century Golden Age. Its Museum District houses the Van Gogh Museum, works by Rembrandt and Vermeer at the Rijksmuseum, and modern art at the Stedelijk. Cycling is key to the city’s character, and there are numerous bike paths.
#VicStefanu
No Roads, No Cars, Just Boats
Most of us town-and-city dwellers spend our days pounding hard, paved ground. But in Giethoorn, Holland, residents float through canals. Built without roads, a series of waterways and bridges connect the town’s 2,400 residents. This incredible aquatic infrastructure has even earned the town the nickname “Little Venice.” We have to admit, a life without asphalt, gridlock and the DMV sounds pretty enchanting.
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Netherlands - The Biggest Party in the Canals of Amsterdam
We are a group of travellers exploring every country in the world, graduating with our Global Degree. Here's the Netherlands! We just made it to Celebrate Kings day, which is one of the biggest parties.
POWERED BY:
Special thanks to IAmsterdam:
HOSTEL WE STAYED AT:
generatorhostels.com/destinations/amsterdam
FOLLOW WHAT WE'RE UP TO
All filmed on a Sony A7s, Canon 5D Mark iii, and Gopro Hero 4
Canals of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam, capital of the Netherlands, has more than one hundred kilometres of canals, about 90 islands and 1,500 bridges. The three main canals, Herengracht, Prinsengracht, and Keizersgracht, dug in the 17th century during the Dutch Golden Age, form concentric belts around the city, known as the Grachtengordel. Alongside the main canals are 1550 monumental buildings. The 17th-century canal ring area, including the Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht and Jordaan, were placed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2010, contributing to Amsterdam's fame as the Venice of the North.
Much of the Amsterdam canal system is the successful outcome of city planning. In the early part of the 17th century, with immigration rising, a comprehensive plan was put together, calling for four main, concentric half-circles of canals with their ends resting on the IJ Bay. Known as the grachtengordel, three of the canals are mostly for residential development (Herengracht or ‘’Patricians' Canal’’; Keizersgracht or ‘’Emperor's Canal’’; and Prinsengracht or ‘’Prince's Canal’’), and a fourth, outer canal, Singelgracht, for purposes of defense and water management. The plan also envisaged interconnecting canals along radii; a set of parallel canals in the Jordaan quarter (primarily for the transportation of goods, for example, beer); the conversion of an existing, inner perimeter canal (Singel) from a defensive purpose to residential and commercial development; and more than one hundred bridges. The defensive purpose of the Nassau/Stadhouderskade was served by moat and earthen dikes, with gates at transit points but otherwise no masonry superstructures.
Construction proceeded from west to east, across the breadth of the layout, like a gigantic windshield wiper as the historian Geert Mak calls it – not from the center outwards as a popular myth has it. Construction of the north-western sector was started in 1613 and was finished around 1625. After 1664, building in the southern sector was started, although slowly because of an economic depression. The eastern part of the concentric canal plan, covering the area between the Amstel river and the IJ Bay, was not implemented for a long time. In the following centuries, the land went mostly for park, the Botanical garden, old age homes, theaters and other public facilities – and for waterways without much plan. Several parts of the city and of the urban area are polders, recognisable by their postfix -meer meaning 'lake', such as Aalsmeer, Bijlmermeer, Haarlemmermeer, and Watergraafsmeer. The canals in Amsterdam are now used as a main form of transportation around the city.
Since the construction of the canals, there have been plans to connect the north of Amsterdam (Amsterdam-Noord) to the city center. In 1999, a plan was made to complete the existing canal circle in the North. Plans to gentrify this area are still under development, but the plan to complete the canals in the north has not yet been incorporated.
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Boats and Seagulls on the Amsterdam Canals in Holland - The Netherlands
The Virtual Tourist walks around the Amsterdam Canals in Holland - The Netherlands