Today
we drove from Amiens to Brugge
via
Calais and Dunkirk.
In
2013 we walked along the white cliffs of Dover
and
watched the ferries leave for Calais.
We
thought it would be interesting to see them arriving in France.
Calais
is the closest French port to England,
just
26 miles away from Dover,
We
were surprised to see the vast sandy beach
with
double and in some places triple rows
of
bathing boxes along the shore.
…......................................................................................
Our
arrival in Dunkirk was a bit stressful.
The
streets we wanted to drive down were blocked off
and
Police were everywhere.
We
then found out that a 4 day cycling event
was
taking place.
We
found a car park and as we walked
toward
the beach and were very surprised when a
car
came down the street with a person leaning
out
the window with a loudspeaker yelling
about
something...we couldn't work out
what
was going on.
THEN
a huge group of cyclists went
whizzing
past a la the Tour de France!
They
were closely followed by official motorbikes
and
support cars. Very snazzy.
We
made it to the beach and managed to find the
sites relating to Operation Dynamo that we were looking for.
sites relating to Operation Dynamo that we were looking for.
The
Dunkirk evacuation, code-named Operation
Dynamo,
was
the evacuation of Allied soldiers
from the beaches and
harbour of Dunkirk, France,
during WW2, between
26 May and 4 June 1940.
The
operation was decided upon when large numbers of British,
French,
Belgian, and Canadian troops were cut off and surrounded
by the
German Army during the Battle of France.
On
the first day of the evacuation, only 7,669 men were evacuated,
but
by the end of the eighth day, a total of 338,226 soldiers
had
been rescued by a hastily assembled fleet of over 800 boats.
Many
of the troops were able to embark from the harbour's
protective
mole onto 39 British destroyers and other large ships,
while
others had to wade out from the beaches,
waiting
for hours in the shoulder-deep water.
Some
were ferried from the beaches to the larger ships
by
what came to be known as the little ships of Dunkirk,
a
flotilla of
hundreds of merchant marine boats,
fishing boats, pleasure craft,
and lifeboats
called
into service for the emergency.
Result:
operation successful.
We
arrived in Brugge late this afternoon and
are
really looking forward to exploring
this
city over the next four days.
First
impressions are that it is GORGEOUS.
Today
we walked 10 k's







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