![Name: Keukenhof Gardens. The Keukenhof is the world's largest garden. It is seen by 800,000 people each year, but its beauty is something of an enigma, unfurling for just two months each year. Nature's talents are combined with Dutch precision to create a garden where millions of tulips, daffodils and hyacinths bloom every year, perfectly in place. its](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwvrNzl__TMXi37z8ZQdxPfMyzgwpSZiNU5n8JRqks0K4obkuZgM2kRfmL1A7fAlLBmYnLIdpGv9Bgmv4V2PWQfX1AKYzy_jNEyx8boOOZBj-opz39MlSjjEQJguWPzTuzmp9XVny3ESLQ/s1600/Keukenhof3.jpg)
The Netherlands manages to be radical, sensible and quaintly staid. The Dutch aren't bogged in their clich é s, even though bikes, dykes, windmills and blazing flower fields are pretty much the norm outside the major cities. Do as the locals do - grab a bike and explore. It's a very big small country, and full of salutary surprises.
Although the Dutch have the cute habit of calling anything higher than a speed bump a mountain, the Netherlands is largely a flat and soggy bog. Vast amounts of land has been reclaimed from the sea over the centuries, and the drained polders are protected by dykes, very few of which are plugged by little boys' fingers. More than half of the country lies below sea level and only in the southeast Limburg province will you find hills. The Netherlands is bordered by the North Sea, Belgium and Germany. The Rhine is the major river, slurping up run-off from the proper mountains in Germany and Switzerland and slopping it out all over the flatlands.
Capital: Amsterdam
Queen: Beatrix van Oranje Nassau
Prime Minister: Jan Peter Balkenende
Government: constitutional monarchy
Time zone: GMT + 1
Area: 41526
Population: 16254900
People: Over 80% of the population are Dutch (Germanic and Gallo-Celtic stock); most of the rest are Indonesian, Surinamese, Moroccan, Turkish or Antillian.
Languages: The language of the people of the Northern Friesland province.
Christian (51%) (Roman Catholic and Protestant), Muslim (5.5%). Close to half (41%) of the Dutch say they have no religious affiliation.
Currency: Euro (€)
Major industries: Service industries, banking, electronics, digital media, horticulture, agriculture and shipping
Major Trading Partners: EU (esp Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, UK), USA
Daylight Saving: From last Sunday in March to last Sunday in October
Country Dialing Code: 31
The Netherlands' main international airport is Schiphol, but Eurolines buses and international trains are also popular methods for reaching the country. Highway connections to the surrounding parts of Europe are extensive, and ferries link the UK with a handful of ports in the Netherlands.
The horizontal nature of the countryside makes the humble bicycle the ideal device for getting around, though there are decent train and bus networks to transport those with pedal-weary feet. You can also drive or motorcycle around, but only if you have an impeccable sense of direction and a knack for finding parking spaces.
The Netherlands has a temperate maritime climate with cool winters and mild summers. It can get pretty drizzly here, especially in autumn and spring when it can seem as though it's going to be grey forever. But because the Netherlands is so flat, changes sweep through quickly when the wind starts to blow. Precipitation (79cm a year) is spread rather evenly over the calendar, and spring is marked by short, violent showers. Winter can get bitingly cold.
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