looking for help,I am taking 56 kids to Holland on a rugby tour,and we are getting the ferry to Amsterdam,and I am wondering if there is a cafe/resturant on arrival in Amsterdam,for the kids to get breakfast
Scott
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I have no idea but you may find out here good thing about Holland is you can phone 'em because most of 'em speak English-------------make sure you dont take 'em to a coffee shop tho--
The Dutch don't do a full breakfast like the Brits (does anyone?) and I think you will be hard pushed to find anywhere to seat that many kids without a reservation. Your best bet would be to get into the centre and try somewhere that has a large al-fresco area and sample the delights of the 'broodje or boterham' the Dutch don't skimp on fillings. The only other suggestion I can make is McDonalds or Burger King.
Good luck - enjoy.
------------- Gaynor
I have three sides, left, right and wrong - which one are you on?
Ah! jusr re-read your post--ferry to Amsterdam?--I guess you are sailing Newcastle-Ijmuiden---so you actually land a good 25miles from Amsterdam--are you actually going into the city centre?---yer best bet could be Mcdonalds, plenty in Holland, website click here
------------- Every day should be a holiday!
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The Dutch for "full English" is "Engelse ontbijt". But your kids won't like the sausage, it's too full of meat.
Anyhow, if you're taking schoolchildren ... why isn't your tour operator organising all this?! I'd be pretty alarmed if it was my child you were taking.
Quote: Originally posted by lizex on 15/3/2008
The Dutch for "full English" is "Engelse ontbijt". But your kids won't like the sausage, it's too full of meat.
Anyhow, if you're taking schoolchildren ... why isn't your tour operator organising all this?! I'd be pretty alarmed if it was my child you were taking.
Liz
Isn't that what sausage is supposed to contain and not a mush of paste and cereal that alot of British sausage contain. The higher the pure meat content the better as far as I am concerned. But it still all boils down to the fact that no one on this earth can do a real English like the English- even if though we predominantly use Dutch bacon, which is excellent.
Sorry for going somewhat off topic, and I hope the 'breakfast' problem is sorted out soon.
Post last edited on 15/03/2008 12:46:49
------------- Gaynor
I have three sides, left, right and wrong - which one are you on?
Scott - who are you travelling with? I take groups of Guides abroad and the operator or coach company normally sorts out venues for meals en route. Coach drivers always know the best places for large groups - have you spoken to your tour organiser/coach company?
One thing - from my experience I wouldn't go too big for the breakfast - kids normally don't do early morning food very well especially when they are travelling, we normally aim for something light.
Jan
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We are just putting ideas together,it will be a light breakfast anyway as the boys have a game late morning,The operator was offering breakfast on the boat ,a bit expensive ,so we are just enquiring about different avenues to bring the cost down for the kids.
If it's just a light breakfast then why not take a couple of packs of cereal with you, some disposal bowls and spoons and buy some milk and/or yoghurt, find somewhere nice to sit (there are plenty of places in Dam to do that) and have your brekkie like that.
------------- Gaynor
I have three sides, left, right and wrong - which one are you on?