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Netherlands-update.md (5485B)


  1. ---
  2. title: The Netherlands so far
  3. date: 2022-03-24
  4. outputs: [html, gemtext]
  5. ---
  6. [I moved to Amsterdam in July 2021][previous], and now that I've had some time
  7. to settle in I thought I'd share my thoughts on how it's been so far. In short:
  8. I love it here!
  9. [previous]: https://drewdevault.com/2021/06/07/The-Netherlands.html
  10. I did end up finding housing through the hacker community thanks to my earlier
  11. post, which was a great blessing. I am renting an apartment from a member of the
  12. [Techinc] hacker space, which I have joined as a member myself. One of my
  13. biggest fears was establishing a new social network here in the Netherlands, but
  14. making friends here has been easy. Through this hacker space and through other
  15. connections besides, I have quickly met many wonderful, friendly, and welcoming
  16. people, and I have never felt like a stranger in a strange land. For this I am
  17. very grateful.
  18. [Techinc]: https://techinc.nl
  19. There are many other things to love about this place. One of my favorite things
  20. about Amsterdam is getting around by bike. In Philadelphia, travelling by
  21. bicycle is signing up for a death wish. In the Netherlands, 27% of all trips
  22. utilize a bike, and in Amsterdam it's as much as 38%. Cyclists enjoy dedicated
  23. cycling-first infrastructure, such as bike lanes separated entirely from the
  24. roads and dedicated bike-only longer-distance artery roads. The city is designed
  25. to reduce points of conflict between bikes and cars, and even when they have to
  26. share the road they're almost always designed to slow cars down and give bikes
  27. priority. The whole country is very flat, too, though Dutch people will be quick
  28. to tell you about The Hill in their neighborhood, which is always no more than 2
  29. meters tall.
  30. Getting around without a bike is super pleasant as well. I have my choice of
  31. bus, tram, metro, long-distance train, or even free ferries across the river,
  32. all paid for with the same auto-recharging NFC card for a low price. Every line
  33. runs frequent stops, so during the day you're generally not waiting more than 5
  34. minutes to be picked up and at night you're probably not going to be waiting
  35. more than 15 minutes at popular stops. When it gets really late, though, you
  36. might wait as much as 30 minutes. The inter-city trains are amazing — I
  37. can show up at any major station without a plan and there's probably a train
  38. heading to where I want to go in less than 10 minutes. Compared to Amtrak, it's
  39. simply mind boggling.
  40. Little things no one here even thinks about have left an impression on me, too.
  41. I see street cleaners out all of the time, in a little squad where workers use
  42. leaf blowers and brooms to sweep trash and dirt from the sidewalks and squares
  43. into the streets where sweepers come through to pick it up. The trash and
  44. recycling bins are regularly collected, and when one of them in my neighborhood
  45. broke, it was replaced within days. There are some areas where trash does tend
  46. to accumulate, though, such as near benches in parks.
  47. Isolated accumulations of trash aside, the parks are great. There's a lot more
  48. of them throughout the city than you'd get in a typical American city. I live
  49. close to two large parks, Rembrandtpark and Vondelpark, plus the smaller
  50. Erasmuspark, all of which are less than 5 minutes of cycling away. I like to
  51. cycle there on cool summer days to read by the lakes or other water features, or
  52. on one of the lawns. These parks also typically have a lot of large cycling-only
  53. roads which act as little cycling highways throughout the city, which means many
  54. of my cycling routes take me through nature even for intra-city travel. Several
  55. of the parks also have public gym equipment available, with which you can get a
  56. pretty good outdoor work-out for free.
  57. The layout of the neighborhoods is quite nice as well. I have not just one but
  58. four grocery stores within walking distance of my house, and I visit one
  59. multiple times per week to pick up food, just a 3 or 4 minute walk away from my
  60. place. Thanks to the ease of accessing good (and cheap) produce and other
  61. ingredients, my diet has improved quite a bit — something I didn't expect
  62. when I moved here. I can't get everything I want, though: finding genuinely
  63. spicy chili peppers is a challenge.
  64. The infamous Dutch bureaucracy is not as bad as people made it out to be. Going
  65. through the immigration process was pretty stressful — as any process
  66. which could end with being kicked out of the country might be — but it was
  67. actually fairly straightforward for the kind of visa I wanted to get. Public
  68. servants here are more helpful and flexible than their reputation suggests.
  69. Something which is proving to be a bit of a challenge, however, is learning
  70. Dutch. This surprised me given my existing background in languages; I thought it
  71. would be pretty easy to pick up. I was able to quickly learn the basics, and I
  72. can conduct many everyday affairs in Dutch, but I found it difficult to progress
  73. beyond this point with self-study alone. I enrolled in a formal class, which
  74. will hopefully help bridge that gap.
  75. I could go on — experiences outside of Amsterdam and throughout the rest
  76. of Europe, the vibes of the FOSS community and other communities I've met,
  77. serendipitously meeting people I knew in America who also moved to Europe, and
  78. so on — but I think I'll stop here for this post. Every time I've paused
  79. to reflect on my relocation abroad, I've come away smiling. So far, so good.
  80. Hopefully that doesn't start to wear off!