Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Amsterdam Court Gives Green Light To Plan To Reduce Flights At Busy Schiphol Airport

Schiphol Airport (AP) — Appeals court judges in Amsterdam ruled Friday that the Dutch government can order Schiphol Airport, one of Europe’s busiest aviation hubs, to reduce the number of flights from 500,000 per year to 460,000.

The Amsterdam Court of Appeal overturned a lower court that concluded in April the government of the Netherlands did not follow the correct procedure when it told Schiphol last year to cut flights.

The airport, civil aviation organizations and airlines that included Dutch flag carrier KLM challenged the government’s order. Friday’s decision can be appealed to the Dutch Supreme Court.

The Amsterdam appeals court said in a statement Friday that it “attaches considerable weight to the interests of local residents” in the densely populated region where people have complained for years about noise pollution from the airport.

In a written response, Schiphol said it accepted the ruling and hopes for a new aviation traffic order from Dutch authorities “as soon as possible with clear and enforceable environmental limits that provide clarity and perspective for all parties involved.”

The airport said that “the most important thing for us is that Schiphol becomes quieter, cleaner and better.”

KLM said it was “disappointed about the ruling” and studying it.

The carrier said it would “continue to engage with other stakeholders in seeking the best way to reduce the number of people affected by aircraft noise.”

Schiphol already is attempting to address the issue. Earlier this year, the airport announced plans to phase out all flights between midnight and 5 a.m., to ban private jets and the noisiest planes, and to abandon a project for an additional runway.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Dutch Horticultural Expo Opens Near Amsterdam

Tulips herald the advent of spring — and the Dutch believe they can also highlight ways to fight climate change.

Thousands of tulips are in bloom this week to welcome visitors to the opening of the once-in-a-decade Dutch horticultural exhibition called Floriade, which seeks to showcase horticultural innovations that can make urban areas more sustainable and healthier as people around the world increasingly shift to cities.

A new university building on the 60-hectare ( 148-acre) site on the edge of this modern city close to Amsterdam has plants growing from one of its walls, while an apartment block is decked out in huge prints of flowers. It towers over a newly-built cable car and a Corten steel sculpture of two human figures made up of tens of thousands of bees.

Sculptor Florentijn Hofman says he is sending a message about protecting biodiversity.

“The work is about the relationship between bees and humanity, about connection. It’s about equilibrium and a respectful relationship between humans and animals and our complex interrelationship with nature,” he said.

Even the site itself highlights Dutch technical knowhow — it is built on land reclaimed from the sea decades ago. And amid a Dutch affordable housing crisis, the Floriade terrain is envisaged to become a new urban area of 3,000 homes after the expo ends on Oct. 9.

Dutch King Willem-Alexander was opening the event Wednesday. It expects to welcome 2 million visitors as the displays shift through the seasons, from springtime to summer and autumn.

The legacy will be “a very, very green living area, a living arboretum,” said Annemarie Jorritsma, a senior Dutch representative at the show. “People are going to live within the nature. And I think it will be a wonderful experience to be able to live here.”

Previous Floriades have been about building parks while this edition is about building a city, says architect Winy Maas, who designed the layout.

“For the first time, this is a Floriade that can become a neighborhood,” he said.

More than 25 nations are presenting sustainable ideas during this year’s show under the theme “Growing Green Cities.” The Netherlands, a world leader in horticulture, has a one-hectare greenhouse where farmers are showing off their newest innovations.

Other countries are blending old and new in their national pavilions — from Qatar’s 3D-printed buildings shaped like age-old pigeon towers to China showcasing new uses for bamboo, a traditional building material.

“What I like very much is that China has taken the trouble to do not something traditional, but to use a traditional material — bamboo — for a very modern developments,” said Jorritsma.

“So you also can see that ... in China, people are now thinking about what are we doing? How can we change our use of the materials we already have and use them in a very modern way?” she added.

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Dutch Leader Announces Tough New Nationwide Virus Lockdown

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte imposed a tough new five-week nationwide lockdown Monday, saying schools, nonessential shops, museums and gyms will close down at midnight until Jan. 19. “We have to bite through this very sour apple before things get better,” a somber Rutte said in a televised address to the nation. As Rutte spoke from his office in The Hague, protesters could be heard blowing whistles outside. “The reality is that this is is not an innocent flu as some people — like the demonstrators outside — think,” Rutte said. “But a virus that can hit everybody hard.”
From Tuesday, all non-essential shops will close until Jan. 19 along with businesses such as hair salons, museums and theaters. All schools and universities will have to switch to remote learning from Wednesday. Child daycare centers will be closed to all except children of key workers. The government also urged people to receive a maximum of two guests over the age of 13 per day, but relaxed the rule slightly for Dec. 24-26, saying three people can visit on those normally festive days. “We realize as a Cabinet how intense and drastic the measures we are taking today are,” Rutte said. “Especially so close to Christmas.” As news of the looming lockdown leaked out before Rutte’s speech, many people keen to take their last chance at Christmas shopping flocked into city centers.
Lines formed Monday afternoon at shops, museums and even pot-selling coffee shops as people tried to beat the lockdown. “It’s ridiculous at the moment,” said Bart van der Wal at the Tweede Kamer coffeeshop in a narrow alley near Amsterdam’s famous canals, where clients were lined up around the corner. “Everybody thinks the coffeeshops will be closed tomorrow.” Van der Wal said he hoped coffeeshops would be allowed to stay open for takeout “because otherwise people will deal on the street.” Bars and restaurants have been closed since mid-October, although many restaurants, cafes and coffeeshops have offered takeout sales. The partial lockdown initially slowed high infection rates, but they have been rising again in recent days. The 7-day rolling average of daily new cases in Netherlands has risen over the past two weeks from 29.22 new cases per 100,000 people on Nov. 29 to 47.47 per 100,000 people on Dec. 13.
“It’s serious. It’s very serious,” Health Minister Hugo de Jonge said Monday ahead of a Cabinet meeting to discuss action to rein in the spread of the virus. “We see the infection numbers rising sharply in recent days, we see that hospital admissions are increasing again, the pressure on the health care sector remains high.” Rutte’s speech Monday evening came a day after neighboring Germany announced similar coronavirus restrictions in an attempt to reduce its stubbornly high infection rates. Those measures also go well into January. And earlier Monday, British Health Secretary Matt Hancock announced that London and surrounding areas will be placed under the highest level of coronavirus restrictions from Wednesday in a bid to slow sharply rising infection rates. Under Tier 3 restrictions, the toughest level in England’s three-tier system, people can’t socialize indoors and bars, pubs and restaurants must close except for takeout. Around 10,000 people in the Netherlands are confirmed to have died of COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak. Rutte said that with vaccinations starting in the new year, 2021 would be a year “of hope, of light at the end of the tunnel.”

Thursday, October 1, 2020

First Stone Laid At Dutch Holocaust Memorial In Amsterdam


THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — A friend of World War II Jewish diarist Anne Frank laid the first stone at a new memorial under construction in Amsterdam to honor all Dutch victims of the Holocaust.

The ceremonial laying of the first stone, on which the name of a Dutch Holocaust victim was engraved, is the latest step in construction of the Dutch memorial, which will feature the names of more than 102,000 Jews, Roma and Sinti who were murdered in Nazi concentration camps during World War II or who died on their way to the camps.

“I almost can’t believe it, but it is now really happening,” Jacques Grishaver, chairman of the Netherlands Auschwitz Committee, said in a statement. “The first of the more than 102,000 stones has been laid.”

The last of the stones, each of which is engraved with a name, is expected to be placed in the memorial in March.

A Dutch court cleared the way last year for the memorial to be constructed. Amsterdam Municipality had granted permission for construction to start in 2017, but residents argued that it was too big for the location and could cause traffic problems.

Jacqueline van Maarsen, who knew Anne Frank before the diarist and her family were captured and sent to Nazi concentration camps, laid a stone engraved by laser with the name, date of birth and age of Dina Frankenhuis, who was murdered, aged 20, on June 4, 1943, at the Sobibor camp.

Designed by Polish-Jewish architect Daniel Libeskind, the memorial in the heart of Amsterdam’s historic Jewish Quarter will be made up of walls shaped to form four Hebrew letters spelling out a word that translates as “In Memory Of.”

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Exploring Europe Through The Eyes Of Van Gogh

In the 125 years since Vincent Van Gogh’s death, his paintings have inspired countless art lovers to scramble for a map.
Scenes conjured by Van Gogh’s paintbrush – the billowing skies of Starry Night, his swooning Sunflowers, Provence’s cypress groves – make many of us wish we could step right into his paintings.
A bronze statue of Vincent Van Gogh in the NetherlandsVincent Van Gogh, seen here in a bronze statue in the Netherlands, has inspired many travellers to explore Europe . Image by Paulina Lenting-Smulders / E+ / Getty Images
American artist Mac Cauley created a virtual reality experience allowing users to do just that. But more enjoyable than strapping on a headset is seeking out the locales that glow so irresistibly in Van Gogh’s work. The locations of his most famous paintings form an arc from Belgium and the Netherlands through to Provence in the south of France. Some are wonderfully unchanged, others have been eroded by time and tourism. But they all offer glimpses into the artist’s mind – plus an excellent excuse to explore some of western Europe’s loveliest regions.

Rural intrigue in Nuenen, Netherlands

A man holding up a print of one of Van Gogh paintings of Nuenen to compare it with the town todayNuenen hasn't changed a great deal since Van Gogh painted the town all those years ago. Image by Luis Davilla / Photolibrary / Getty Images
Wandering Nuenen today, with only the whirr of bicycle spokes disturbing the streets, is calming. Some might say soporific. But it was in this peaceable Dutch town, amid churning watermills and tree-lined lanes, that Van Gogh completed his first major work.
Having spent his early life travelling between the Netherlands, England and France, he paused in Nuenen, 7km east of Eindhoven, to spend a couple of years avidly sketching farm workers. His breakthrough was The Potato Eaters (1885), a complex, earthy depiction of a family settling in for a meal.
It’s a smouldering image, one that brims with life. Following the painting’s origins to sleepy Nuenen might have you blinking in surprise. But the contrast was precisely Van Gogh’s aim: he wanted to reveal the lesser-seen aspects of peasant life, with all its earnest, robust pleasures.
Experience it: Nuenen’s major sight for fans of the artist is Van Gogh Village (vangoghvillagenuenen.nl), rich in stories about his early life and archives of his letters. It has an ‘outdoor museum’ that leads a trail through sights in Nuenen that he sketched. Nuenen is thin on sights from Van Gogh’s major works but a stroll from the south end of Parkstraat up to the north end of Berg bypasses the artist’s former lodgings; slightly north of here is Gerwenseweg, thought to be where he painted The Potato Eaters.

Self-abuse in Antwerp, Belgium

The Grote Market, AntwerpThe Belgian city of Antwerp has modernised, but some of the sights from Van Gogh's day - such as the Grote Market - remain. Image by Jorg Greuel / The Image Bank / Getty Images
Shortly afterwards, Van Gogh painted his iconic Skull with a Burning Cigarette (1885-6). Details are hazy, but it's thought this famously macabre image came from Van Gogh’s time as a frustrated student of Antwerp's Academy of Art.
Some see this work as a swipe at artistic dogma. For others, it alludes to Van Gogh's (partly self-inflicted) poor health. During his time in Antwerp, Van Gogh was enfeebling himself on a diet of bread and tobacco. He began to seek solace in absinthe, the anise-flavoured spirit known for its green colour and mild psychoactive properties. All the while he worked voraciously, sketching the city sights.
Experience it: Today’s Antwerp has a slick modernity thoroughly alien to the creaking port city Van Gogh knew. To marvel at the contrast, stroll from gabled 16th-century Vleeshuis down to steel-lined Theaterplein. But some sights remain the same: from the Het Steen fortress on the banks of the Schelde, walk east to Grote Markt – Van Gogh faithfully sketched both of these well-preserved sights.

Capturing the romance of Provence, France

Saint Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-RémyVan Gogh committed himself to the Saint Paul-de-Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy, but produced works of sublime beauty in spite of his mental anguish. Image by Helena Lovincic / iStock / Getty Images
In Provence, the air is thick with the fragrance of lavender. Cicadas as big as a thumb whirr across wheat fields that blush gold with the setting sun. Here in southern France, mostly around Arles and Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, the artist painted with the most vibrant colours of his career.
Van Gogh lavished his canvases with Provence’s cypress and olive groves. In city scenes like Café Terrace at Night (1888), he hinted at the excitement and mischief of Arles’ nightlife. The same month, Van Gogh painted Starry Night over the Rhone (1888), whose light-dappled view remains the same today, mere paces from where Van Gogh lodged on Arles’ Place Lamartine.
But this was also the period when Van Gogh’s mental health would dramatically relapse. Following an absinthe binge and an argument with his artist friend Gauguin, he mutilated his own ear. Despite his distress, and voluntary commitment to the Saint Paul-de-Mausole asylum in nearby Saint-Rémy, his works from this period are suffused with Provence’s natural beauty – especially in the celestial swirl of his famous Starry Night (1889).
Experience it: Base yourself in Arles, best known for its well-preserved Roman arena and the Camargue wetlands to its south. A few paces west of the arena (which Van Gogh painted), down Rue des Arènes, is Le Cafe la Nuit. This is the spot featured in Van Gogh's Café Terrace at Night; sadly it's a tourist trap today. From Arles, the half-hour drive to Saint-Rémy takes you past cypress groves galore; in Saint-Rémy village you’ll find Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum, facing the wheat field he painted in 1889-90.

Final days in Auvers-sur-Oise, France

The church of Auvers-sur-Oise, FranceAt the end of his tormented life, Van Gogh moved to Auvers-sur-Oise, France, where he painted the local church. Image Michel Mory / iStock / Getty Images
Van Gogh's last days were intense and solitary. The artist followed his doctor Paul Gachet, a firm friend and muse, to Auvers-sur-Oise (27km northwest of Paris). Here, he painted the Church at Auvers (1890); its sweeping lines create a wild, almost ominous version of the tidy edifice that still stands here today.
Though new research leads some to believe Van Gogh was murdered, he is generally understood to have died by suicide. It has become commonplace to cite Van Gogh's Wheatfield with Crows (1890), in which birds soar haphazardly over a darkening meadow, as a final outpouring of melancholy. In reality there is scant evidence that this painting was Van Gogh's last. His final creative outpourings vary wonderfully in tone, from pensive portraits of his doctor and torrid thunderclouds to lush Daubigny’s garden.
Experience it: Visiting Auvers, you can admire remarkably unchanged sights from Van Gogh's paintings. North of the train station lies the Church at Auvers. Walking west along Rue de Général de Gaulle you can see the town hall he painted. The street parallel, Rue Gachet, is where Van Gogh's doctor resided. Facing the town hall is the Ravoux Inn, where Van Gogh breathed his last. This once-humble tavern is a Michelin-starred restaurant today (maisondevangogh.fr). And yes, you will find absinthe on the drinks menu.

Van Gogh 2015: 125th anniversary events around Europe

An illuminated cycle path in Nuenen inspired by Van Gogh's Starry NightThe illuminated cycle path in Nuenen is inspired by Van Gogh's Starry Night. Image by Luis Davilla / Photolibrary / Getty Images
A clutch of special events commemorate 125 years since the death of Van Gogh; check vangogheurope.eu for the full programme. Highlights include:
  • An illuminated cycle path inspired by Starry Night in Nuenen (until December 2015).
  • Van Gogh-inspired menus and art-food fusion in Ede (until December 2015).
  • Delving into Van Gogh's final days in Auvers-sur-Oise (until 20 September 2015).
  • The unveiling of 20 new works by contemporary artists, all inspired by Van Gogh, in Amsterdam (until January 2016).

This  Vincent Van Gogh page provides visitors with Van Gogh's bio, over 80 of his works, exclusive articles, as well as up-to-date Van Gogh exhibition listings. The page also includes related artists and categories, allowing viewers to discover art beyond our Van Gogh page. We would love to be included as an additional resource for your visitors via a link on your page. 

  


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/travel-tips-and-articles/exploring-europe-through-the-eyes-of-van-gogh#ixzz3dFoNRhOr

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

10 of The Best Theme Parks … That You’ve Probably Never Heard Of

Popeye village, Malta.

Popeye village, Malta. Will the spinach be served with olive oil? Photograph: Alamy



Popeye Village, Anchor Bay, Malta

The 1980 film Popeye may have been a notorious flop but its has a legacy in the charming family attraction of Popeye Village, the self-consciously ramshackle collection of wooden buildings set on a beautiful bay constructed as a film set for the Robin Williams movie. Visitors can explore the colourful village, meet the characters and mosey into a range of attractions including a Popeye comic museum. There are also regular boat trips, puppet shows and a cinema, where you can, ahem, watch the Popeye film. It is what it is.
 Admission free. Check website for opening hours, popeyemalta.com

Efteling, Kaatsheuvel, Netherlands

Netherlands Kaatsheuvel Amusement park
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 Photograph: Alamy
Popular in the Netherlands but rarely visited by foreigners (94% of its visitors are Dutch), Efteling is a huge fantasy theme park with a large number of fairytale rides and attractions. It opened in 1952 and is among the oldest theme parks in the world – pre-dating Disneyland in the US by three years. Rumour has it that Efteling inspired Walt Disney to build his own, and Disneyland Paris consulted Efteling for tips on how to better appeal to a European audience. Among its flagship rides is the grand double-track wooden rollercoaster Joris de Draak, or Joris the Dragon, in which two trains race each other around the track. Sculptures of magical creatures are dotted throughout the park, including Brothers Grimm creation, Lang Nek (long neck), the unofficial mascot of the park.
 From €34, kids under 3 free. Open July-Aug 10am-8pm, Sept-June 10am-6pm,efteling.com

Vulcania, Saint-Ours, Auvergne, France

Vulcania, Saint-Ours, Auvergne, France
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 Photograph: Alamy
France does amusement parks with an educational slant extremely well. WhilePuy du Fou in the Vendée wows visitors with historical battle re-enactments, Vulcania makes volcanoes fun and worth learning about. As well as a museum (borrrr-ing! … just kidding, it’s full of ambitious interactive exhibits that help explain how volcanoes work), the park has rollercoasters, including the Dragon Ride that accelerates to g-force +2. The park was designed by Pritzker prize-winning architect Hans Hollein and its centrepiece is a 28-metre-high cone covered in lava stone on the outside, and a firey gold-coloured interior.
 Adults €24, kids 6-16 €17. Opening times vary, check website for details,vulcania.com

Grūtas Park, Druskininkai, Lithuania

Revolutionary fighter sculpture in Grutas Park.
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 Revolutionary fighter sculpture in GrÅ«tas Park. Photograph: Daniel Alexander/Design Pics/Corbis
You know those retro Jurassic Park-type attractions, where you walk through a forest featuring giant dinosaur sculptures? Well GrÅ«tas is like that, but instead of meeting diplodoci and T-Rexs you’ll find dinosaurs of the Soviet period: monuments of Lenin, Marx and Stalin scatter the park. Unofficially known as Stalin’s World, the park was established to preserve the history of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic era. Alongside the sculpture garden’s collection of 86 statues there are darker touches, such as guard towers and fragments of concentration camps (though they never went ahead with the idea of transporting visitors to the park on Gulag-style trains). There’s also a kids’ playground, Luna Park, based on Soviet times and a small zoo – presumably with animals the Russian’s didn’t send into space.
 Adults £4.35, kids 6-16 £2.20. Open winter 9am-5pm, summer 9am-10pm,grutoparkas.lt

Siam Park, Tenerife, Canary Islands

Siam Park, Water Kingdom Theme Park, Costa Adeje, Tenerife
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 Photograph: Alamy
For a taste of Thailand (in Tenerife) look no further than Siam Park. The huge water park, built in 2008, features adrenaline-pumping rides, such as the Mekong Rapids, the Dragon and Tower of Power, the latter of which has a near-vertical 28-metre drop. Those who don’t want to risk losing their swimwear can opt for the park’s more relaxing options: drift along the Mai Thai river (not filled with the cocktail, unfortunately) or sunbathe on Siam beach.
 Adults €34, kids 3-11 €23. Open May-Oct 10am-6pm, Nov-Apr 10am-5pm,siampark.net

Leolandia, Capriate San Gervasio, Lombardy, Italy

Leolandia
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 Photograph: Alamy
If you’ve been traipsing round Milan and the kids are starting to get riled, Leolandia – an hour’s drive away – is the ideal place to let them unwind. The children’s theme park has been upgraded in the last two years: Peppa Pig world was added earlier this year, while Cowboy Town has been renewed. Alongside various rides and a petting zoo, the park has a range of shows, featuring fairies, pirates and parrots. On a side note, those looking for a particularly obscure, hair-raising Italian theme-park experience, should check in to Ai Pioppi playground in Treviso: a kinetic theme park built in the back garden of a restaurant and free to anyone who buys a meal.
 Adults €13.50, concessions €12.50. Open daily 10am-6pm, leolandia.it

Bakken, Klampenborg, Denmark

The balloons in Bakken amusement park
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 Photograph: Alamy
Did you know that Bakken is the world’s oldest amusement park? No, neither did we. Just 10 minutes north of Copenhagen (which also boasts the 19th-centuryTivoli amusement park in the city centre), Bakken is a charming, historic attraction that was founded in 1583. It is frequented by classical white-faced clown Pjerrot, but rarely attracts visitors from outside of Denmark. And while it may not be able to compete with the high-octane thrills of modern theme parks, Bakken still has impressive rides: the grand wooden Rutschebanen coaster, built in 1932, is considered a classic. The tasteful and nostalgic park is surrounded by greenery and makes for a easygoing (and corporate-free) family day out.
 Adults £24, kids £17. Open 26 March-30 August, check website for daily opening hours, bakken.dk

Tripsdrill, Germany

Treehouses  at Tripsdrill, Germany
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 Photograph: Tobias Kleinschimdt/Corbis
Opened in 1929, Tripsdrill is Germany’s oldest theme park and, impressively, has remained in the hands of the Fischer family since it opened. The large park has a modern-built wooden rollercoaster, Mammut, which is a 860 metres long, as well log flumes and rapids rides. The wildlife park is another draw; around 130 species inhabit it, with wild horses, Arctic wolves and bears, along with regular falconry displays.
 Adults and children over 12 €28.50, kids 4-11 €24.50, under 4s free. Theme park and wildlife park open 28 Mar-8 Nov 9am-6pm; during winter season (Nov-Mar) wildlife park open 9am-5pm on weekends, tripsdrill.de

Area 47, Ötztal, Tirol, Austria

Area 47, Austria
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Area 47 is a huge outdoor adventure park on the riverside in the Ötztal valley and full of the kind of activities that make people go “woah … dude!” It offers visitors an impressive range of opportunities to hurl themselves about the place: a 30 metre-high “mega swing”; a rope course suspended below a bridge, which is also fitted with a climbing wall; a water park and a diving tower; water-ski jumping slope and spectacular slides. You can also go blobbing (look it up) and the park runs rafting, canyoning and caving trips and has an off-road biking course. GoPro population: high.
 Admission and opening times vary depending on activity, check website for more details; a six-day park action package, including teepee accommodation, costs from €396, area47.at

High Chaparral, Värnamo, Sweden

High Chaparral, Sweden
Founded by Big Bengt (a name that will amuse those from the UK more than elsewhere), High Chaparral is a wild west theme park in the form of a frontier town – complete with steam train running through it. The highlight, however, has to be the epic shows that are like watching a live western film, complete with shootouts, explosions and people throwing each other off wooden porches. There are six different shows to watch, including one about the legendary swordsman Zorro and city patron Lucky Luke, who has to keep the bandits behind bars.
 Day pass from £16.50. Open 10am-6pm 30 May-25 June, 26 June-16 Aug, 21-23 and 28-30 Aug, highchaparral.se
Contributed by Will Caldwell, www.theguardian.com