Off to Keukenhof


In May of 2019, Scott and I finally decided it was time to visit the tulip fields at Keukenhof in the Netherlands – described as the largest flower garden in the world.  We've known about the tulip display for decades and many people (maybe you?) have visited.


However, we were worried that it would be a bit kitschy and commercial for our taste, so decided to enliven the trip a bit by doing it as multi day bike ride starting and ending in Amsterdam.


Me, posing at one of the photo spots set up for tourists


I could write an entire post about bike riding in the Netherlands, but let's just leave it at this: they have some amazing cycling roads and paths where you rarely interact with motorized vehicles.  It was also rainy and cold, a lot like one of our coldest winter days in San Diego, but wearing all our winter clothes and rain gear we managed to do OK, partially due to having rented electric bikes and a navigation system.

Here's a short video of our first day cycling:



Anyway, back to Keukenhof…

We arrived just in time for a huge rain and hailstorm to pass through.  That delayed our entering the garden for a while. There were busloads of tourists from all over the world and the gardens were quite crowded in the morning.  However, with the rain still on the tulips, it made from some great photos and in the afternoon the sun came out for a while, which also made for some more great photos.  Perhaps it was all the flowers, or my new camera, but I took the most photos I've ever taken in one day, over 400. Scott, with his Iphone, also took more photos than he's ever taken in single day.


Many had told us that we were at the end of the tulip season, but we never would have known it with all of the display beds, gardens and pots overstuffed with tulips in full bloom. They must spend a lot of time switching out the flowers to keep everything looking so pristine and in full bloom for several months. The theme of the gardens this year was a salute to the 1960's, Flower Power. There were Volkswagen bugs and hippy vans in some of the gardens and an entire greenhouse filled with tie-dyed walls with matching floral displays.


However, not everything was tulips. There were huge pots of amaryllis, begonias, and countless other flowers.

One entire greenhouse was dedicated entirely to orchids.


There were also lots of plants and flowers that weren't tulips.




If you made it this far in the post, you are probably starting to wonder where the tulips are.  Well, thank you for your patience and perseverance -  you waited long enough.

Color rainbow of tulips

Center of a fringed tulip

Outside, Keukenhof has managed to use tulips about every way possible.

Giant flower pots 

Another giant  flower pot 

From gigantic pots, to rivers of color, to landscape displays along waterways and ponds, to mixed beds creating a kaleidoscope colors. Lots of time and hours went into creating the various color schemes and themes.


Just when we thought we had seen it all, we'd come into a new area with a totally different mood and a different way of displaying the blooms. It helps that tulips also come in some amazing variations, more than I ever imagined: traditional, egg-shaped, fringed, double, bi-colored, lily-flowered, peony-flowered, tall, short, upright, swaying, swirling, and countless more. The same can be said about the colors, which ranged from the almost black to the purest white, pastels, bright tropical colors and everything in between except blue.



It was overwhelming, and we managed to stay almost until closing time.



I’ve don’t my best at trying to capture the beauty and endless floral diversity of the tulips at Keukenhof.  But still it is nothing close the experience of being there. Even though I don't recommend tulips for San Diego gardens (way too much work for a short, unsustainable, display), I highly recommend a springtime visit to the commercial capital of tulips.




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