When Hayden’s parrain JT flew over from NYC, we took him to the quirky towns of Dutch Baarle-Nassau and Belgian Baarle-Haartog, all tangled up within each other like a jigsaw puzzle. Located across the Dutch border, twenty Belgian exclaves can be found here, with seven Dutch exclaves within the Belgian exclaves. This meant that Hayden could stand with one foot in the Netherlands and one foot in Belgium:

There is a “front door rule” that means that the position of the front door determines whether a house is classified as being in Belgium or the Netherlands. The nationality of the home is also indicated by a flag next to the house number. We visited the house in which the border goes straight through the middle of the door, and thus has two addresses (and two doorbells):

Loveren 2
2387 Baarle-Hertog
Belgium

and

Loveren 19
5111 Baarle-Nassau
The Netherlands

There was even a divisive border across my lunch, separating the savoury cheese and potato pancake from the sweet cherry crepe. I ate each in isolation and they were delicious.
20120126-180109.jpg

Plus, JT hand-delivered to us a delicious Black & White cookie, all the way from New York City. Hayden is still too little, so I ate it for him.

Related posts:

  1. The Netherlands in Belgium in the Netherlands
  2. Family Portrait
  3. Family pic
  4. Holidays in Newcastle with my family
  5. Hayden’s Daddy
2 Responses to “One family across two countries”
  1. Love your jeans! (yes I know so many things I could have commented on and I picked clothes ;) )

    Hayden’s hat also rates special mention – so cute!

  2. Thanks Amy. A post-pregnancy purchase.
    (When he’s not being a piglet, sometimes Hayden is a racoon).