Netherlands-update.md (5485B)
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- title: The Netherlands so far
- date: 2022-03-24
- outputs: [html, gemtext]
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- [I moved to Amsterdam in July 2021][previous], and now that I've had some time
- to settle in I thought I'd share my thoughts on how it's been so far. In short:
- I love it here!
- [previous]: https://drewdevault.com/2021/06/07/The-Netherlands.html
- I did end up finding housing through the hacker community thanks to my earlier
- post, which was a great blessing. I am renting an apartment from a member of the
- [Techinc] hacker space, which I have joined as a member myself. One of my
- biggest fears was establishing a new social network here in the Netherlands, but
- making friends here has been easy. Through this hacker space and through other
- connections besides, I have quickly met many wonderful, friendly, and welcoming
- people, and I have never felt like a stranger in a strange land. For this I am
- very grateful.
- [Techinc]: https://techinc.nl
- There are many other things to love about this place. One of my favorite things
- about Amsterdam is getting around by bike. In Philadelphia, travelling by
- bicycle is signing up for a death wish. In the Netherlands, 27% of all trips
- utilize a bike, and in Amsterdam it's as much as 38%. Cyclists enjoy dedicated
- cycling-first infrastructure, such as bike lanes separated entirely from the
- roads and dedicated bike-only longer-distance artery roads. The city is designed
- to reduce points of conflict between bikes and cars, and even when they have to
- share the road they're almost always designed to slow cars down and give bikes
- priority. The whole country is very flat, too, though Dutch people will be quick
- to tell you about The Hill in their neighborhood, which is always no more than 2
- meters tall.
- Getting around without a bike is super pleasant as well. I have my choice of
- bus, tram, metro, long-distance train, or even free ferries across the river,
- all paid for with the same auto-recharging NFC card for a low price. Every line
- runs frequent stops, so during the day you're generally not waiting more than 5
- minutes to be picked up and at night you're probably not going to be waiting
- more than 15 minutes at popular stops. When it gets really late, though, you
- might wait as much as 30 minutes. The inter-city trains are amazing — I
- can show up at any major station without a plan and there's probably a train
- heading to where I want to go in less than 10 minutes. Compared to Amtrak, it's
- simply mind boggling.
- Little things no one here even thinks about have left an impression on me, too.
- I see street cleaners out all of the time, in a little squad where workers use
- leaf blowers and brooms to sweep trash and dirt from the sidewalks and squares
- into the streets where sweepers come through to pick it up. The trash and
- recycling bins are regularly collected, and when one of them in my neighborhood
- broke, it was replaced within days. There are some areas where trash does tend
- to accumulate, though, such as near benches in parks.
- Isolated accumulations of trash aside, the parks are great. There's a lot more
- of them throughout the city than you'd get in a typical American city. I live
- close to two large parks, Rembrandtpark and Vondelpark, plus the smaller
- Erasmuspark, all of which are less than 5 minutes of cycling away. I like to
- cycle there on cool summer days to read by the lakes or other water features, or
- on one of the lawns. These parks also typically have a lot of large cycling-only
- roads which act as little cycling highways throughout the city, which means many
- of my cycling routes take me through nature even for intra-city travel. Several
- of the parks also have public gym equipment available, with which you can get a
- pretty good outdoor work-out for free.
- The layout of the neighborhoods is quite nice as well. I have not just one but
- four grocery stores within walking distance of my house, and I visit one
- multiple times per week to pick up food, just a 3 or 4 minute walk away from my
- place. Thanks to the ease of accessing good (and cheap) produce and other
- ingredients, my diet has improved quite a bit — something I didn't expect
- when I moved here. I can't get everything I want, though: finding genuinely
- spicy chili peppers is a challenge.
- The infamous Dutch bureaucracy is not as bad as people made it out to be. Going
- through the immigration process was pretty stressful — as any process
- which could end with being kicked out of the country might be — but it was
- actually fairly straightforward for the kind of visa I wanted to get. Public
- servants here are more helpful and flexible than their reputation suggests.
- Something which is proving to be a bit of a challenge, however, is learning
- Dutch. This surprised me given my existing background in languages; I thought it
- would be pretty easy to pick up. I was able to quickly learn the basics, and I
- can conduct many everyday affairs in Dutch, but I found it difficult to progress
- beyond this point with self-study alone. I enrolled in a formal class, which
- will hopefully help bridge that gap.
- I could go on — experiences outside of Amsterdam and throughout the rest
- of Europe, the vibes of the FOSS community and other communities I've met,
- serendipitously meeting people I knew in America who also moved to Europe, and
- so on — but I think I'll stop here for this post. Every time I've paused
- to reflect on my relocation abroad, I've come away smiling. So far, so good.
- Hopefully that doesn't start to wear off!