A Day in Giethoorn, Zaanse Schans, and Volendam
This post is part of our Europe travel series. If you missed it, you can read the first part here and the previous post here . We were both very interested in exploring the Dutch countryside, especially the charming village of Giethoorn, the windmills of Zaanse Schans, and the harbor town of Volendam. On the third day of our trip, May 15, we set out to visit Giethoorn. The name Giethoorn has an interesting origin. In the 13th century, immigrants from the Mediterranean region discovered hundreds of goat horns in this area. In Dutch, “Giet” means goat and “Hoorn” means horn, and that is how the village came to be called Giethoorn. The land in Giethoorn is mostly marshy. When early settlers arrived, they couldn’t easily find firewood for cooking, so they dried the peat and roots found in the marshland and used them as fuel. To transport these materials from one place to another, they dug canals. Over these canals, they built small wooden bridges. On the firmer patches of ...