Marken’s wintery landscape
We had last visited Marken over a year ago in summer. Despite having endured a particularly cold and long winter this year, I didn’t expect Marken to have changed much with the season. I was, of course wrong; but the scale of how wrong I was surprised me. Within 20 minutes of leaving Amsterdam and crossing the underground IJ tunnel, you find yourself in a landscape that bears little resemblance to the city you left behind. There were swamps and open fields all around us. We saw canals where the water was mostly frozen. A light fog seemed to be a natural part of the air’s constitution here.
A thin strip of road connects Marken to the mainland. When looking out at the vast stretch of water from the buswindow you feel small and inconsequential.
We spent most of the day walking around the island amidst this surreal, desolate landscape.
The fog blurred the horizon and you couldn’t tell where the water ended and the sky began.
It was all very still and silent. Loud squeals of ducks and swans would occasionally echo through this landscape. The only sign of being close to the civilisation was the drone of an airplane that flew over the clouds unseen (and the 5 bars of signal on my cellphone).
Markemeer, the vast lake surrounding the island, was partly frozen. During our last visit, sailboats of various sizes and vintages were flitting about, but this time we only saw small upturned boats moored on the slope of the dike that encloses the island.
This lot looked like a school of dead porpoises:
The lighthouse at Marken looked like it was out of a watercolour and would dissolve into Markemeer if you blinked.
The little sand beach around the lighthouse looked frozen in time. The snow on the sand looked like foam from a wave crashing on the shore.
A tractor that was probably carrying supplies for the repair of the lighthouse stood there abandoned. It looked quite majestic in this setting.
As we walked back to the bus stop, we were spooked a little by this mannequin keeping a watch on a patch of vegetation growing inside an old boat left in a field - not quite where you’d expect to find a boat or a mannequin. (‘A mannequin guarding a patch of vegetation inside an old boat’ sounds like the title of a Dali painting).