This event is so legendary that even a lot of our Olympic Skaters would gladly give up their gold medals just to be able to participate in this event once
Cause they would be a legends if they finished it. There are many Olympic Skaters but not many Skaters have won this. It would be the ultimate challenge to someone that loves skating.
@@DenUitvreter I don't know. But if they ever do it again I can imagine many Olympic skaters wanting to join. Especially now that the world is smaller. What self respecting skater wouldn't want to test their abilities.
@@maaiker2977 ruclips.net/video/quLQvsj_N7s/видео.html Koss and Karlstad were giants, and very well loved champions in Friesland were they skated so much indoor races. So I guess they were invited because you have to be a member of the Elfstdenvereniging and there was a waiting list for that.
As a kid, I got Everts autograph. In 1997 I was able to skate the last elfstedentocht myself. 1 million people coming to Friesland to watch and skating in to these small towns and seeing thousands and thousands of people cheering you on is something spectacular. I will never forget that day.
The look of amazement on his face is just priceless hahaha. Fun story: Couple years ago some guy decided to swim the entire 200km course in one guy. First time he didnt make it and ended up in the hospital. Mad lad tried again and finished it the second time.
I'm a 53yo Surinamese-Dutch woman living here for 50 years, and the first 2 things I learned after we moved here were: swimming and iceskating during my first year in The Hague and Scheveningen. Learning to ride the bike followed the year later. If they would announce that the Elfstedentocht would be posible this winter, you bet your hiney even I would be making preparations for the live TV event. Id be wearing an orange knit hat and pair of gloves, eating erwtensoep (pea soup) hile cheering the skaters on in my warm home. It would also mean that we would be able to skate on the ponds as well, so I would be skating again on the nearby ponds with my sons. I love snow. Snow makes me happy like a little kid, but ice? You bet I'm going to skate again! Stupid global warming....
An uncle of mine partook in that years tour, at a certain point he broke one of his skates but then another skater injured himself on that part of the course and couldn't continue, he gave my uncle his skates to finish and so he did. After that they formed a great friendship going on skating tours together. Us family watched the event on TV at my aunts with all cousins together having some hot chocolate.
@@marune1975 Niet alleen dat hoor: toen ik in 2012 voor het eerst van m'n leven op een Amsterdamse gracht ging schaatsen (wat een ruimte!) waren er ook iets van 5 toeristen die de aller-aller-allerlaatste schaatsen hadden weten te regelen: natuurlijk, bij enkele van hen waren de schaatsen eigenlijk te groot. Ik had voor mezelf daarom ook extra sokken bij me, maar had ze niet nodig. Die leen je dan gewoon uit. Vonden die toeristen heel raar ;) . Het meest aparte (voor hun) was toen een van de vrouwen haar schaatsen aan had en toen haar handtas weer pakte om die weer op haar lichaam te dragen. Meteen stonden er 3 Nederlanders om haar heen: 'Nee, niet doen, als je valt en je valt erop, raak je ernstiger gewond dan zonder.' 'Ja, maar waar dan?' 'Gewoon midden op het ijs zetten bij de andere tassen, iedereen let erop.' Je had haar gezicht moeten zien! Wat je ten sterkste afgeraden was in Amsterdam, moest je nu ineens wél doen ;) Het duurde even, maar toen ging ze overstag.
My dad actually participated in the last Elfstedentocht (1997). He had just recovered from a groin rupture and was only released from the hospital 5 days before the event. But then they announced the Elfstedentocht would take place and he called the doctor if he was allowed to go. The doctor said no way, you own't even make it to the first city. He went anyway and only had to quit at the 9th city before going back to the hospital. But he was extremely happy that he participated as it was the last edition up till now.
We watch this live at school all day long on a projection big screen, sweet memories! 🤗 Evert van Benthem won it twice, also in 1986! Nowadays he lives in Canada as a dairy farmer! ✌🏼
Fun Fact: the CEO of a company I used to work for had a clause in his labor contract that said he could leave work at any given time in order to participate in the Elfstedentocht. I kid you not!
There's nothing in my contract, but if the Elfstedentocht is happening, no one works. The entire province comes to a halt, it clogs up with tourists and skaters and it's one big party.
can we watch the famous dutch show: Te land, ter zee en in de lucht. It runs for 39 seasons(excluding the compliations) . Its so much fun. Even without subs.
You should watch the movie De hel van '63 (=The hell of '63), it's about the Elfstedentocht of 1963, during the coldest winter in the twentieth century in the Netherlands. It's become iconic. Only a small number of skaters managed to reach the finish. And each year we hope and pray for a real long, cold winter so we can skate the Elfstedentocht again. About the stamps, in the last Elfstedentocht (1997) one of our well known skaters, Piet Kleine, did complete the tour but one of the stamps was missing. Although he could prove he was there at that precise point (TV images) he didn't receive the little silver cross and was removed from the list with endresults. Very hard, but those are the rules. Also if you arrive 1 minute too late at the finish, you don't get one. Nice cat!
You should definitely watch the 1963 Elfstedentocht! I was 10 yrs old at the time and I remember it was sooo cold and very windy also. During the night and morning the temperature was about -20 degr C (which is for our country with a maritime climate very cold!). Around noon it was a bit warmer but with the severe gusts of stormy winds you didn't feel it. Only 1% of the skaters reached the finish line. The next day we suffered an eastern storm. Brrrrr
Our harbors used to freeze over for weeks each winter. That rarely happens anymore. We are lucky if we get 3 freezing days in a row (where the temperature is also freezing during the day, so ice only gets thicker). But for the 11 city tour: we need at least 15 cm (?) of ice: everywhere on the route (including under bridges, where it freezes much slower). So, on the rare occasion that we do have say 10 days of freezing in a row: we call the district ice managers: and demand to know how thick the ice is. If its thick enough: the leader of the 11 city tour will pronounce in Frisian: "It Giet Oan!": 'we are doing it'. Then there is a real frenzy. Only about 15.000 people can join, but 100.000+ people want to ride. Some people wait years, decades: to be allowed to ride. We are waiting 24 years already now for a new one to happen (last one was in 1997).
The Queen was there for another special reason... Her son and now our King Willem Alexander did the tour under a different name and she waited for him to arrive safely
The organisation of course is huge. That is why the script is updated every year and all parts of it are spoken through as if there will be a tour. For example the quality of the rugs used for the ‘klunen’ (walking with your skates on) is tested every summer and sometimes they buy some kilometers of new rugs. The same for the paint of the finish line, the little houses for the stamp posts and the lights used on many parts of the route. And why so thorough? Because the rule is the tour has to be organized within 24 hours after there was a GO from the board.
Thanks for this reaction. I was born and raised in Hindeloopen, one of the 11 cities. ("City" is because of historic trading rights, it has a population of around 1000 so every other person would call it a town of course) I have witnessed 3 tours (1985, 1986 and 1997) but watching this instantly gives me goosebumps again. A special type of Frisian pride. Due to climate-change we will probably never see a tour again but if by a miracle there will be another edition somewhere in the future, consider yourself invited.
Evert van Benthem (the dairyfarmer) won in 1985 and 1986. After that he became an instant legend. Like a lot of dutch farmers he left The Netherlands for Canada in the 90s to farm over there.
Climate change might spit out some cold winters before it progresses further according to some researchers. Let's hope so. Would he incredible if the Elfstedentocht could be held at least once more.
Those were good times.⛄❄⛸ Alarm clock at 5 in the morning 🕔 because you didn't want to miss anything. With a blanket around you on the couch 🛋 and a cup of hot♨️ chocolate-milk ... and the 📺TV on. It was also quiet on the street and everyone had a day off. Great to see these images again..🎥📼 SUPER👍💙
this actually made me cry a little. It is very unlikely that this tour will ever take place again. Our winters now are not cold and mostly wet. Our King Willem Alexander, also finished the tour. He is so proud of it that he wore his little cross among his other medals when he was crowned. Oh, this brings back sweet memories. In front of the tv all day long!
So something interesting to look into is the guy who did this tour in summer. HE SWAM THE WHOLE 200KM, to raise money for cancer research as he himself is a cancer survivor. His name is Maarten van der Weijden.
ah man you makin me laugh..lookin at this event unfolding for you eyes. This brings back the best winter memories...all day tv on, everybody day off, and the whole country mad!! the biggest event in the Netherlands.
Eleven Cities Tour of '63 is legendary. Known as The Hell of '63, only 69 out 9 292 participatents finished that race, I kid you not. Temperatures as low as -18℃ (-0.4°F), harsh winds, powder snow everywhere. That were the least of their problems. It's difficult to tell a dutchman not to go skating when they can. Even my brother and his wife (jokingly) announced they'd not attend their own wedding if one of these Tours were held on their date. And no one would blame them if they didn't attend their own reception. It's that kind of craze.
The hell of '63 is a Dutch movie about the elf steden tocht at 1963 when it was really cold with snow blizzards and all crazy sh*t. Maybe you can watch it sometimes.
@ria My uncle was skating that year. And he finished as well!! Sad thing is I only got to know this after he died, almost 1 year ago. He was a modest man, that's for sure! 🍀
The year after - 1986 - our crown-prince and now king Willem-Alexander partook and finished the tour. A sad aspect of this tour is that there is a time limit. If you're included in the last group you'll be started 4 hours behind the first group. Kind of a bummer if you finish less than four hours after the time limit expires; you won't receive the little cross of achievement.
Ja, soldaat W.A. van Buren was uiteindelijk toch herkent.😂 Technisch gezien hoef je het niet als schuilnaam te zien. Een van hun titels is graaf van Buren.🙃 Het is nog best een slim plan. De koninklijke familie staat toch wel aan de finish, dus de eerste uren was het allemaal niet vreemd.🤔
Thank you so mutch mr Bleu eyes to cover this Dutch tradition , I hope that if you visit Holland you will be pleasantly surprised about everything, greetings from Benjamin from the Netherlands.
I remember watching this live when I was 7 years old. For ice to grow thicker so it can hold this much participants they remove the snow. Snow is like an insulator preventing very cold air to get to the ice to make it grow thicker. On the 1997 elfstedentocht, they transplanted ice. Thick ice blocks were cut out with chainsaws somewhere off course and were moved to parts of the course that were too thin to make it happen. The last elfstedentocht was in winter 1996/1997 I didn't get to see it on tv. But I experienced the cold of this winter in training at the 11th airmanouvre brigade. Some nights were brutal like -15C with windchill. A frostbite warning we got 1 morning and a couple of recruits had frostbite injuries. So almost 25 years ago we had our last elfstedentocht. The history of dutch ice skating is actually very interesting. In the 19th century roads were regularly not paved. If you were rich, you could buy a horse and travel. Most people just had to walk to work on dirt roads and back. The Netherlands is full of canals so when there was ice in the winter, you could travel longer distances and much faster. You would be able to visit family 20 miles away and get back before dark. And also trade good and buy things that are not produced in your village. Clay pipes for smoking tobacco were produced in the bigger cities so these were bought and taken back on these trips for example. Ice skating was a necessity to travel for the common worker and became part of our cultural history.
We almost had one back in 2012 but it was called off at the last moment becaus the conditions of the ice ended up not being quite right. But when it was announced that there would be a very real chance hat one could be held that year people went absoluty crazy. It was all over the news and pretty much every talkshow for like two weeks straight. They even deployed our militairy to help sweep the ice. That’s how big of a deal this was. And when the final verdict came people were devastated
Nice to see your cat by the way 😉. Fun to see that old footage. I was 7 years old at that time I like your reactions. Always nice to see the Netherlands from a different perspective as a Dutchie
A few weeks ago I went on a walk in Kockengen in Utrecht. It was a 'klompenpad' route. Straight through fields with a lot of curious young cows. 😂 super cute, but a little scary if 10 cows run up to you the moment you enter the field.
@@DC88_ Scottish Highlanders are far more scary, but they do not come as close as normal cattle. Never start running, their brakes are less than yours.
Okay loved this reaction my father and his brothers always did this when this skating 11 city's .. BUT COME ON ! THAT KITTY CAT THAT WALKED IN , WAS TO ADORABLE 🥰
I'm 25, never witnessed it in my life. Whem they host the next 1 i will hope to try and enter. Altough i have been able to ice skate almost every year. Never was it thick enough for this race. (Live in flevoland, netherlands)
I never saw this documentary! The tv at work was on all day. It was a fantastic event. So glad you showed this one. Thanks! Edit, lol and of course 11:30 AM. It was great to experience this through your eyes. Friendships for life were built on the ice there, helping one another pull through till the finish line.
And then try to imagine that March 2012 we got quite close to one: national news once again was live and the room was packed with every journalist (even foreign ones) one could fit him or herself in there. I think that they estimated about 8,5 million people saw the news broadcast that night, because everybody hoped for the 'it giet oan'. When the Elfsteden-commissie (the Eleven-cities commission) announced 'I do not have good news. The ice unfortunately is not good enough' the whole room applauded because everyone knew they were under intense pressure to just go and organise one because the last one was so long ago. I can also remember how the National Railways already warned upfront that should the race go on, they would withdraw trains from other routes to support the routes to the North (Friesland) as an estimated 1 to 1,5 million people were likely to travel to the province by train to be part of the Elfstedenfeesten (Eleven-city festivities). To put that into perspective: 1 to 1,5 million people is about the pre-corona number of daily traintravellers on all trains in the Netherlands. I did get to see the Keizersgrachtrace in Amsterdam in 2012, first time for me, just like I got to skate on an Amsterdam canal as well (first time again). Where the eleven cities have their troubles considering ice-thickness, Amsterdam has the canal-cruiseboats that keep breaking the ice. It takes careful maneuvring by the city-council to get the canal-cruise companies to stop sending boats down the canals so people can skate on it...
It does happen every year. If these is not enough ice for the real tour they organize an alternative route that is equally long and held at the Weissensee.
I used to skip class as often as possible (found a decent job after all). During this episode I skipped the whole day, except for the frist 2 classes. Had to report to the head of the school (again). "Well, it's you again, what's your excuse this time?" "11-stedentocht sir. Was watching it at the tv rental shop down town. " "OK, legitimate, for once."
i remember this like it was yesterday 😊we still had to go to school, but it was open extra early and my mother made me extra lunch and a bag of lays and some candy. i remember it was still dark when i was going to school and freezing cold. there were no lessons that day and we watch the tour with the whole class (36) on a 21 inch tv . untill 16:00 and my father picked me up . feeling very old now 😂😂😂 i realy miss those days
6:00 i love how this shows the time, no internet to find info so you had to make a phonecall or know people who knew. ps. I'm also from 83' mate .. good year ;)
One of the main reasons this event hasn't been held for ages is because they want thicker ice to support a load more people then you see there. Having it now would basically cripple the country as everyone would want to see it with their own eyes, because people know it will be ages before it's held again. Also awesome to see my home town in there!
This same race in 1985 also had a mystery guy skating with the others....our now King Willen Alexander..who had to be incognito to attend the tour. He was registered under the false name Van Buuren;-)
Seeing it back again I remember being 14 years old back than. We were all in school and tv was on in the Cantine. The worst kids stayed there to watch it and we got sent home with teachers calling out parents. It was great 😂
I was there to cheer alongside the ice. It was a great experience, a great atmosphere. It was a party for the people that were cheering en singing. Uptil now a one time experience. Maybe in the future... What a task for those skaters!!!!
And even when it's not an Eleven city skate-race, skate-races (or at least weather that makes ice-skating possible), provide such a unique atmosphere. March 2012 was great: the Keizersgracht in Amsterdam froze up, something I never expected to see anymore in my life. On my way to work, I first didn't understand why so many people with Sanex headbands and spandex clothing got on board the bus. But there was a skate-tour set out in or around Ilpendam and many left the bus there. You could just feel the excitement. And when I walked a little from work back to central station instead of taking the tram like I usually do, I got at the Keizersgracht-race: cartraffic had been closed off from both sides, there were people delivering soup and other stuff from their homes everywhere and the PA was just wild when two skaters were again competing against eachother. When they would finish, a huge cheer along the whole of the canal woud fill the air. It was especially weird because I had been skating on the same canal before the races. For the first time in my life I skated on an Amsterdam canal. The tourists that were there as well, had a blast, even though they had the worst skates ever if you wanted to go for speed (Friese doorlopers...). But yeah, I completely forgot what a unique experience it was for them to be on vacation in the Netherlands at exactly the right time ánd having the luck finding skates for rent... Some advice for foreigners: should you be in The Netherlands and the weather takes a turn for the best, do NOT rely on rental skates: big chance that by the time you want them, you can't get them anywhere anymore. Rent them in advance or buy them. It's also very Dutch though that if you could not get any skates, someone who is resting for a while will lend you his or her skates (if they fit ofcourse). And oh yeah: Get rid of your bag, rucksack and items in your pockets. If you fall, you'll injure yourself far worse than without those items on your body.
The racers on ice skates go up to 50 km/h or just over 30 mph (imagine just leisurely trucking along at 30 miles and this guy on ice skates goes "Morning!" as they slowly overtake you in your car xD). Now, if you're doing the 11 city tour by kayak your speed is about 8 km/h (5mph) and even they have a non-stop version for the full 200 km and a 36 hour time limit. That said, there's no ice, so a lot warmer. Though there's a multi-day version too, so I think I'll start with that :P
Every year we hope on a new Elfstedentocht, because the whole country is very happy, Dutch are always on the ice, this year in februari we were on vacation on the Isle Texel, and when we went home, there were skaters everywhere, because it was very cold, it looked like an old painting of Rembrandt van Rijn, your reaction is amazing like always 🥰 greetings from the Netherlands, I’m like you, me and skates are no combination 😂
of course we are emediatly jumping on the elfstedentocht when we're able to hold this spectacle..... can you imagine, its only been 3 times in your lifetime(1985,1986 and 1997) that we could actually do it....its rarer than meeting a unicorn in the wild ! :)) Great channel btw, subscribed !
actuallly there were people who missed a stamp and they were taken out of the results(amd so didnt receive the 11 cities cross), like Piet Kleine. 20 years later they still gave him the missing stamp, but he refused the elf steden kruisje
Some nice facts for you also; the next year in '86 the event was again and with the same winner! In that year also our prince of that time competed and finished! He used an alias so no one would recognise him( he's our king now) The last event was in 1997 so we are waiting for a new one for quite a long time now!
My grandfather participated in the '63 version. He had always wanted to participate, but after he wished he didn't. He came out alive and without damage.
When the 11 stedentocht began in 1985, my school gave us a day of ijsvrij (icefree). I watched it from 05.00 am till 24.00 pm. My mother made peasoup and the famous stamppot. It was also the first time I was allowed to drink alcohol. A kind of gin (jenever). I was 13 at the time. The 11 stedentocht is so rare even olypian athletes would skip the Olympics just to have the honour to scate it. My only wish is that i have the chance to scate it. But the last time it was held was in 1996... I hate global warming...
They even do ice tranplantation! When there is no ice in important places like under a bridge, they cut with a chainsaw big pieces of thick ice from other places and place it where there is no ice. Great invention. By the way, i was one of the spectators at the finish line in this video. I lived in Leeuwarden.
A year later during the next Elfstedentocht I was in the military on a 4-night bivouac exercize. Sleeping in a 2-person person tent on frozen ground temperatures as low as -15°C (5°F). As if you were sleeping inside a freezer. I was still trembling when we arrived back at the barracks and after a warm shower.
For me it was the first time i saw it on television. i was a primary school teacher at that moment and we watched it live on tv with all the children. Haha even your cat likes it, how sweet!
They cut up the ice like that to make it more smooth, it's natural ice meaning it isn't as flat as a ice skate ring would have. If you would have all those bumps on the ice and together with pitch black night.... Yeah that will cause a serious problem. Think about skaters tripping and seriously hurting them self's, in that cold it could spell death. So making it flat will ensure less trouble over all. Tough isn't quite cutting it, this tour is more a hell on ice. If you are a spectator you will have the chance to freeze to death. For the skaters injuries, hyperthermia, limbs getting removed due to frostbite and death. Yes, people going crazy to participate in this on their own free will. This isn't a team thing, everyone is on their own. However the tour riders do help out everyone that fell or need help. The ones that wish to speed and 'win' this tour will not stop for ANYONE or ANYTHING. It's go go go all the way. If you get in the way, you will get pushed out of the way. 18:30 Those mats and rugs (yes the same you would find in your house) are there so they can get on land and over to the other side of the ice. It's called "klunen" (klúnje in the Frisian language). They don't stop, just run on your ice skates on the boards and over to the other side. If you stop you will damage the skates more. Yes, this is a hell on your ankles. They don't stop to sleep, this is done in a single day. Leave at 5 AM arrive around noon. No rest for the racers. For the tour riders it can easily become 8 PM or in some cases midnight before they arrive. And to make it clear, it's not just Dutch people that do this tour. I met people from all over the world that joined in, Including Americans, Australians, Russians even people from South-Africa. They all came in to participate. I participated myself as tour rider in 1997, managed to finish as well. I was only 14 then. Kids these days complain that it's cold while only 10 Celcius above freezing point. I managed to arrive at 4:50 PM, meaning I was rather quick for a teen as well.
It was my first year in secondary school. I can remember I skated a lot and waking up early to see the start with hot chocolate and hot porridge. Going to school being able to see the race at televisions all over our school and finishing our day at about 12PM to see the first people finish and go ice skating ourself. Good memories! Ps you may also be interested in a movie about this event of 1963. It was -20 centigrades: De Hel van '63
This is probably the winter I learned to skate at the pond in front of our apartment at 4 years old. I love those memories, the whole neighborhood would be out on that pond.
I was in highschool in a little town in Friesland in 1985. We did have to come to school but instead of classes a big screen had been set up in the cafeteria and we all watched the tour. And yeah, too much snow can be a problem. Snow on the ice works as isolation, preventing the growth of more ice beneath. I'm just guessing here, but the part where they were cutting up the ice, were probably ridges in the ice. You don't want to have people tripping and tumbling over eachother with essentially sharp blades strapped to their feet. As a side note, not sure if it was this edition or the 1986 one, but our current King also participated and finished the tour. Mad respect for Prince Pils.
yeah, i was there at the finishline both 85 and 86 (as a spectator) . i spend my teen years in Leeuwarden. a spectical indeed. the freezing cold gave me a whole new perspective of the word "snowballs" :-)
At that time I stayed with my wife and at her parents whom were living about 3 km's away from the finish line. I was 29 yrs than and we just could walk to the event. A complete part of the highway, just near the frozen waterway, was used for all the facilities for television, portable studio's, telecommunication and whatever they needed. The best view we had on television at home, but just seeing al the activities was very special.
3:32 The summary, for those who like short videos, is this couple of sentences: "People are ready for this" and "That's pretty intense..." Yeah, it is.
My father participated in the tour of 1985 (this race) and the 1986 race and still has both crosses , I could never do that, I am as fit as a beanie bag chair.
Hi. In this 'elfstedentocht' the 18 year old prince Willem Alexander, the current Dutch king, participated as a 'tourer'. He did this incognito under the name 'W.A. van Buren',. But halfway through the tour the public and the media already had recognized him.. He had startingcard number 1.
there are no teams , just skate for yourself. . professionals and just skate lovers, A farmer won this year and the next tour too EVERT VAN BENTHEM he went to canada years ago, still a farmer, has cows, and is still famous. the last winner, was a spruit farmer , ha ha henk angenent, in 1997 .great that you show this . its dutch proud .
this is so beautiful to watch! my granddad skated 3/4 times, 1 of them in '96 the elfstedentocht didn't actually took place but he skated it anyway. also, my dad skated the tocht twice, the '96 tocht included. so the official '97 elfstedentocht was very unique. we still have the small cross in our cabinet
I hope we get a really cold winter this year, skating on natural ice is the best. Last year we could skate on natural ice for a few days, but the ice was only 6 cm and not the required 15 for the eleven cities tour....
This event is so legendary that even a lot of our Olympic Skaters would gladly give up their gold medals just to be able to participate in this event once
Cause they would be a legends if they finished it. There are many Olympic Skaters but not many Skaters have won this. It would be the ultimate challenge to someone that loves skating.
@@maaiker2977 Didn't great olympic champion Johan Olav Koss ride the 1997 edition as a tourer?
@@DenUitvreter I don't know. But if they ever do it again I can imagine many Olympic skaters wanting to join. Especially now that the world is smaller. What self respecting skater wouldn't want to test their abilities.
@@maaiker2977 ruclips.net/video/quLQvsj_N7s/видео.html
Koss and Karlstad were giants, and very well loved champions in Friesland were they skated so much indoor races. So I guess they were invited because you have to be a member of the Elfstdenvereniging and there was a waiting list for that.
@@DenUitvreter Yes, he,did
As a kid, I got Everts autograph. In 1997 I was able to skate the last elfstedentocht myself. 1 million people coming to Friesland to watch and skating in to these small towns and seeing thousands and thousands of people cheering you on is something spectacular. I will never forget that day.
The look of amazement on his face is just priceless hahaha.
Fun story: Couple years ago some guy decided to swim the entire 200km course in one guy. First time he didnt make it and ended up in the hospital. Mad lad tried again and finished it the second time.
I'm a 53yo Surinamese-Dutch woman living here for 50 years, and the first 2 things I learned after we moved here were: swimming and iceskating during my first year in The Hague and Scheveningen. Learning to ride the bike followed the year later. If they would announce that the Elfstedentocht would be posible this winter, you bet your hiney even I would be making preparations for the live TV event. Id be wearing an orange knit hat and pair of gloves, eating erwtensoep (pea soup) hile cheering the skaters on in my warm home.
It would also mean that we would be able to skate on the ponds as well, so I would be skating again on the nearby ponds with my sons. I love snow. Snow makes me happy like a little kid, but ice? You bet I'm going to skate again! Stupid global warming....
I love this!!!
Geweldige comment! 💜😊
@@jdj8168ummmm beetje rare comment
Leuk om te horen🎉
Ik 56 nu. Uit Rotterdam. Zo ongelooflijk veel gemeenschappelijk. Prachtig!
OMG. That is a cute cat.
Oops, I thought it was a spray painted racoon.
An uncle of mine partook in that years tour, at a certain point he broke one of his skates but then another skater injured himself on that part of the course and couldn't continue, he gave my uncle his skates to finish and so he did. After that they formed a great friendship going on skating tours together. Us family watched the event on TV at my aunts with all cousins together having some hot chocolate.
Kippenvel hiervan
Wow, that's great! That makes the best friendships :)
Dit is typisch zo'n verhaal dat de Elfstedentocht zo legendarisch maakt. Leuk dat je dit deelt! Hoop dat ze nog lang mooie tochten mogen maken.
@@marune1975 Niet alleen dat hoor: toen ik in 2012 voor het eerst van m'n leven op een Amsterdamse gracht ging schaatsen (wat een ruimte!) waren er ook iets van 5 toeristen die de aller-aller-allerlaatste schaatsen hadden weten te regelen: natuurlijk, bij enkele van hen waren de schaatsen eigenlijk te groot. Ik had voor mezelf daarom ook extra sokken bij me, maar had ze niet nodig. Die leen je dan gewoon uit. Vonden die toeristen heel raar ;) . Het meest aparte (voor hun) was toen een van de vrouwen haar schaatsen aan had en toen haar handtas weer pakte om die weer op haar lichaam te dragen. Meteen stonden er 3 Nederlanders om haar heen: 'Nee, niet doen, als je valt en je valt erop, raak je ernstiger gewond dan zonder.'
'Ja, maar waar dan?'
'Gewoon midden op het ijs zetten bij de andere tassen, iedereen let erop.' Je had haar gezicht moeten zien! Wat je ten sterkste afgeraden was in Amsterdam, moest je nu ineens wél doen ;) Het duurde even, maar toen ging ze overstag.
I love watching stuff like this from my comfy couch in my warm house.
My dad actually participated in the last Elfstedentocht (1997). He had just recovered from a groin rupture and was only released from the hospital 5 days before the event. But then they announced the Elfstedentocht would take place and he called the doctor if he was allowed to go. The doctor said no way, you own't even make it to the first city. He went anyway and only had to quit at the 9th city before going back to the hospital. But he was extremely happy that he participated as it was the last edition up till now.
We watch this live at school all day long on a projection big screen, sweet memories! 🤗
Evert van Benthem won it twice, also in 1986! Nowadays he lives in Canada as a dairy farmer! ✌🏼
My cousin is his neighbour;-)
@@mauijttewaal Do they eat Rookworst a lot?
Fun Fact: the CEO of a company I used to work for had a clause in his labor contract that said he could leave work at any given time in order to participate in the Elfstedentocht. I kid you not!
Additionally, a lot of companies have a special clause to get the day off (if possible within reason) if the tour happens.
There's nothing in my contract, but if the Elfstedentocht is happening, no one works. The entire province comes to a halt, it clogs up with tourists and skaters and it's one big party.
My father actually had simmilar contracts, even ones where any natural ice would allow him to take him of
Manfred de Graaf a dutch acteur had always this clausule in al of his contracts
can we watch the famous dutch show: Te land, ter zee en in de lucht. It runs for 39 seasons(excluding the compliations) . Its so much fun. Even without subs.
Yes yes yes 👍
Oh yes, especially the DAF-backward races.
He shot him (down)!
@@henkvanmunster4722 oeps, Simple Reacts did that one a week ago (comment by André van Duin)
That is a very good suggestion
You should watch the movie De hel van '63 (=The hell of '63), it's about the Elfstedentocht of 1963, during the coldest winter in the twentieth century in the Netherlands. It's become iconic. Only a small number of skaters managed to reach the finish.
And each year we hope and pray for a real long, cold winter so we can skate the Elfstedentocht again.
About the stamps, in the last Elfstedentocht (1997) one of our well known skaters, Piet Kleine, did complete the tour but one of the stamps was missing. Although he could prove he was there at that precise point (TV images) he didn't receive the little silver cross and was removed from the list with endresults. Very hard, but those are the rules. Also if you arrive 1 minute too late at the finish, you don't get one.
Nice cat!
This film is indeed a great one to watch! Hopefully you can find decent English subtitles though….
In 2013 i was at De Wereld Draait Door where the numbers 1, 2 and 3 from 1963 were. That was so cool and wont forget that!
I know they had one fatality from frost exposure that year, but uncertain if it was more then one. Plenty of toes were lost to frostbite in 63 though.
@@erikjansen4298 Don't forget the frozen eyes
Only every 11 years there's a realistic chance, during solar minimum;-)
You should definitely watch the 1963 Elfstedentocht! I was 10 yrs old at the time and I remember it was sooo cold and very windy also. During the night and morning the temperature was about -20 degr C (which is for our country with a maritime climate very cold!). Around noon it was a bit warmer but with the severe gusts of stormy winds you didn't feel it. Only 1% of the skaters reached the finish line. The next day we suffered an eastern storm. Brrrrr
Yes and my grandfather finished that one! Amazingly proud of him!
@@ingabritta3547 Wow! He is a hero! 🥰👍
@@ingabritta3547 my grandfather was 17 back then and you needed to be 18 to skate it.
he skated it in 85 ore 86 and 96
My husband was born on that day!
Our harbors used to freeze over for weeks each winter. That rarely happens anymore. We are lucky if we get 3 freezing days in a row (where the temperature is also freezing during the day, so ice only gets thicker). But for the 11 city tour: we need at least 15 cm (?) of ice: everywhere on the route (including under bridges, where it freezes much slower). So, on the rare occasion that we do have say 10 days of freezing in a row: we call the district ice managers: and demand to know how thick the ice is.
If its thick enough: the leader of the 11 city tour will pronounce in Frisian: "It Giet Oan!": 'we are doing it'. Then there is a real frenzy. Only about 15.000 people can join, but 100.000+ people want to ride. Some people wait years, decades: to be allowed to ride. We are waiting 24 years already now for a new one to happen (last one was in 1997).
Evert van Benthem won the tour twice, in ‘85 and ‘86! He is now a dairy farmer in Canada.
The Queen was there for another special reason... Her son and now our King Willem Alexander did the tour under a different name and she waited for him to arrive safely
no that was 1986 not 85
Under the alias of W.A. van Buren
@@jelle_smid Yup i saw him riding by was there as a spectator.
Dit was zo cool!
Onzin. Bea was er bij vanwege het landsbelang en folklore. Willy reed pas later mee.
The organisation of course is huge. That is why the script is updated every year and all parts of it are spoken through as if there will be a tour. For example the quality of the rugs used for the ‘klunen’ (walking with your skates on) is tested every summer and sometimes they buy some kilometers of new rugs. The same for the paint of the finish line, the little houses for the stamp posts and the lights used on many parts of the route. And why so thorough? Because the rule is the tour has to be organized within 24 hours after there was a GO from the board.
in a way that makes sense as in 24 hours it could warm up so much that it is not safe to organise the event
Thanks for this reaction.
I was born and raised in Hindeloopen, one of the 11 cities. ("City" is because of historic trading rights, it has a population of around 1000 so every other person would call it a town of course)
I have witnessed 3 tours (1985, 1986 and 1997) but watching this instantly gives me goosebumps again. A special type of Frisian pride.
Due to climate-change we will probably never see a tour again but if by a miracle there will be another edition somewhere in the future, consider yourself invited.
Evert van Benthem (the dairyfarmer) won in 1985 and 1986. After that he became an instant legend. Like a lot of dutch farmers he left The Netherlands for Canada in the 90s to farm over there.
Climate change might spit out some cold winters before it progresses further according to some researchers.
Let's hope so.
Would he incredible if the Elfstedentocht could be held at least once more.
Those were good times.⛄❄⛸ Alarm clock at 5 in the morning 🕔 because you didn't want to miss anything. With a blanket around you on the couch 🛋 and a cup of hot♨️ chocolate-milk ... and the 📺TV on.
It was also quiet on the street and everyone had a day off. Great to see these images again..🎥📼 SUPER👍💙
this actually made me cry a little. It is very unlikely that this tour will ever take place again. Our winters now are not cold and mostly wet. Our King Willem Alexander, also finished the tour. He is so proud of it that he wore his little cross among his other medals when he was crowned. Oh, this brings back sweet memories. In front of the tv all day long!
So something interesting to look into is the guy who did this tour in summer. HE SWAM THE WHOLE 200KM, to raise money for cancer research as he himself is a cancer survivor.
His name is Maarten van der Weijden.
Almost died doing it as well
Pfff, wat een aandachtstrekker die van der Weijden
@@camel303 Nou, mooi zo! Dat is letterlijk waardoor er zoveel geld op kan worden gehaald.
You forgot to mention he is an Olympian.
ah man you makin me laugh..lookin at this event unfolding for you eyes. This brings back the best winter memories...all day tv on, everybody day off, and the whole country mad!! the biggest event in the Netherlands.
Eleven Cities Tour of '63 is legendary. Known as The Hell of '63, only 69 out 9 292 participatents finished that race, I kid you not. Temperatures as low as -18℃ (-0.4°F), harsh winds, powder snow everywhere. That were the least of their problems.
It's difficult to tell a dutchman not to go skating when they can. Even my brother and his wife (jokingly) announced they'd not attend their own wedding if one of these Tours were held on their date. And no one would blame them if they didn't attend their own reception. It's that kind of craze.
The hell of '63 is a Dutch movie about the elf steden tocht at 1963 when it was really cold with snow blizzards and all crazy sh*t. Maybe you can watch it sometimes.
The music in the intro is the tune of the Frisian anthem!
Now you can see why we are so good in speedskating. You have to see the video from 1963 it was so cold.
@ria My uncle was skating that year. And he finished as well!! Sad thing is I only got to know this after he died, almost 1 year ago. He was a modest man, that's for sure! 🍀
@@Tuinierenopstrobalen So he is your hero
@@clifffan3 definitely!!
The year after - 1986 - our crown-prince and now king Willem-Alexander partook and finished the tour.
A sad aspect of this tour is that there is a time limit. If you're included in the last group you'll be started 4 hours behind the first group. Kind of a bummer if you finish less than four hours after the time limit expires; you won't receive the little cross of achievement.
I came here to see what year our King scatet this event
Ja, soldaat W.A. van Buren was uiteindelijk toch herkent.😂
Technisch gezien hoef je het niet als schuilnaam te zien. Een van hun titels is graaf van Buren.🙃
Het is nog best een slim plan. De koninklijke familie staat toch wel aan de finish, dus de eerste uren was het allemaal niet vreemd.🤔
Thank you so mutch mr Bleu eyes to cover this Dutch tradition , I hope that if you visit Holland you will be pleasantly surprised about everything, greetings from Benjamin from the Netherlands.
I remember watching this live when I was 7 years old. For ice to grow thicker so it can hold this much participants they remove the snow. Snow is like an insulator preventing very cold air to get to the ice to make it grow thicker. On the 1997 elfstedentocht, they transplanted ice. Thick ice blocks were cut out with chainsaws somewhere off course and were moved to parts of the course that were too thin to make it happen.
The last elfstedentocht was in winter 1996/1997 I didn't get to see it on tv. But I experienced the cold of this winter in training at the 11th airmanouvre brigade. Some nights were brutal like -15C with windchill. A frostbite warning we got 1 morning and a couple of recruits had frostbite injuries. So almost 25 years ago we had our last elfstedentocht.
The history of dutch ice skating is actually very interesting. In the 19th century roads were regularly not paved. If you were rich, you could buy a horse and travel. Most people just had to walk to work on dirt roads and back. The Netherlands is full of canals so when there was ice in the winter, you could travel longer distances and much faster. You would be able to visit family 20 miles away and get back before dark. And also trade good and buy things that are not produced in your village. Clay pipes for smoking tobacco were produced in the bigger cities so these were bought and taken back on these trips for example. Ice skating was a necessity to travel for the common worker and became part of our cultural history.
We almost had one back in 2012 but it was called off at the last moment becaus the conditions of the ice ended up not being quite right. But when it was announced that there would be a very real chance hat one could be held that year people went absoluty crazy. It was all over the news and pretty much every talkshow for like two weeks straight. They even deployed our militairy to help sweep the ice. That’s how big of a deal this was. And when the final verdict came people were devastated
Aaw!! Your cat!! That's sweet! Got 2 here and a french bulldog puppy ❤
Nice to see your cat by the way 😉.
Fun to see that old footage. I was 7 years old at that time
I like your reactions. Always nice to see the Netherlands from a different perspective as a Dutchie
"y'all don't have any predators up there, right...?"
Me: Big, docile, grass chewing, curiously onlooking COWS. Who, are all inside in winter. ;-)
A few weeks ago I went on a walk in Kockengen in Utrecht. It was a 'klompenpad' route. Straight through fields with a lot of curious young cows. 😂 super cute, but a little scary if 10 cows run up to you the moment you enter the field.
@@DC88_ True! They're friggin' big, but they don't deliberately hurt anyone, but yeah... a 1000 kilo cow on yr toes is no fun ;-)
@@DC88_ Scottish Highlanders are far more scary, but they do not come as close as normal cattle.
Never start running, their brakes are less than yours.
@@dutchman7623 How are they scary, they look so cute!
@@qwertyuiopzxcfgh Horns.
Okay loved this reaction my father and his brothers always did this when this skating 11 city's .. BUT COME ON ! THAT KITTY CAT THAT WALKED IN , WAS TO ADORABLE 🥰
That is the sweetest cat i have ever seen!
The 1985 and 1986 winner, Evert van Benthem emigrated to Canada later on. The last one was run in 1997.
Henk Angenent won then
I'm 25, never witnessed it in my life. Whem they host the next 1 i will hope to try and enter. Altough i have been able to ice skate almost every year. Never was it thick enough for this race. (Live in flevoland, netherlands)
Love the dedication of you wearing your orange shirt!
I never saw this documentary! The tv at work was on all day. It was a fantastic event. So glad you showed this one. Thanks!
Edit, lol and of course 11:30 AM. It was great to experience this through your eyes. Friendships for life were built on the ice there, helping one another pull through till the finish line.
And then try to imagine that March 2012 we got quite close to one: national news once again was live and the room was packed with every journalist (even foreign ones) one could fit him or herself in there. I think that they estimated about 8,5 million people saw the news broadcast that night, because everybody hoped for the 'it giet oan'.
When the Elfsteden-commissie (the Eleven-cities commission) announced 'I do not have good news. The ice unfortunately is not good enough' the whole room applauded because everyone knew they were under intense pressure to just go and organise one because the last one was so long ago.
I can also remember how the National Railways already warned upfront that should the race go on, they would withdraw trains from other routes to support the routes to the North (Friesland) as an estimated 1 to 1,5 million people were likely to travel to the province by train to be part of the Elfstedenfeesten (Eleven-city festivities). To put that into perspective: 1 to 1,5 million people is about the pre-corona number of daily traintravellers on all trains in the Netherlands.
I did get to see the Keizersgrachtrace in Amsterdam in 2012, first time for me, just like I got to skate on an Amsterdam canal as well (first time again). Where the eleven cities have their troubles considering ice-thickness, Amsterdam has the canal-cruiseboats that keep breaking the ice. It takes careful maneuvring by the city-council to get the canal-cruise companies to stop sending boats down the canals so people can skate on it...
I only remember this once in the 25 years I’ve been here and they talk about the Elfstedentocht like it happens every year!
Weissensee!!
It does happen every year. If these is not enough ice for the real tour they organize an alternative route that is equally long and held at the Weissensee.
Always loved ice skating growing up and we used to create a mini 11 city course in our local forest.
I used to skip class as often as possible (found a decent job after all). During this episode I skipped the whole day, except for the frist 2 classes.
Had to report to the head of the school (again).
"Well, it's you again, what's your excuse this time?"
"11-stedentocht sir. Was watching it at the tv rental shop down town. "
"OK, legitimate, for once."
i remember this like it was yesterday 😊we still had to go to school, but it was open extra early and my mother made me extra lunch and a bag of lays and some candy. i remember it was still dark when i was going to school and freezing cold. there were no lessons that day and we watch the tour with the whole class (36) on a 21 inch tv . untill 16:00 and my father picked me up . feeling very old now 😂😂😂 i realy miss those days
Smiths chips it would have been back then. Not lays 😂.
Love your cat😻😊
6:00 i love how this shows the time, no internet to find info so you had to make a phonecall or know people who knew.
ps. I'm also from 83' mate .. good year ;)
One of the main reasons this event hasn't been held for ages is because they want thicker ice to support a load more people then you see there.
Having it now would basically cripple the country as everyone would want to see it with their own eyes, because people know it will be ages before it's held again.
Also awesome to see my home town in there!
This same race in 1985 also had a mystery guy skating with the others....our now King Willen Alexander..who had to be incognito to attend the tour. He was registered under the false name Van Buuren;-)
Your face in this video haha. Love it. You thinking ok they are nuts!
I was 7 years old and saw this on tv all day. Together with my brother And mother. Evert van Benthem won Two Times.
Greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱.
What a sweet cat you have😻
Seeing it back again I remember being 14 years old back than. We were all in school and tv was on in the Cantine. The worst kids stayed there to watch it and we got sent home with teachers calling out parents. It was great 😂
Racers, tourists, everbody who accomplished the "elfstedentocht"" are heroes
I was there to cheer alongside the ice. It was a great experience, a great atmosphere. It was a party for the people that were cheering en singing. Uptil now a one time experience. Maybe in the future...
What a task for those skaters!!!!
And even when it's not an Eleven city skate-race, skate-races (or at least weather that makes ice-skating possible), provide such a unique atmosphere. March 2012 was great: the Keizersgracht in Amsterdam froze up, something I never expected to see anymore in my life. On my way to work, I first didn't understand why so many people with Sanex headbands and spandex clothing got on board the bus. But there was a skate-tour set out in or around Ilpendam and many left the bus there. You could just feel the excitement. And when I walked a little from work back to central station instead of taking the tram like I usually do, I got at the Keizersgracht-race: cartraffic had been closed off from both sides, there were people delivering soup and other stuff from their homes everywhere and the PA was just wild when two skaters were again competing against eachother. When they would finish, a huge cheer along the whole of the canal woud fill the air.
It was especially weird because I had been skating on the same canal before the races. For the first time in my life I skated on an Amsterdam canal. The tourists that were there as well, had a blast, even though they had the worst skates ever if you wanted to go for speed (Friese doorlopers...). But yeah, I completely forgot what a unique experience it was for them to be on vacation in the Netherlands at exactly the right time ánd having the luck finding skates for rent...
Some advice for foreigners: should you be in The Netherlands and the weather takes a turn for the best, do NOT rely on rental skates: big chance that by the time you want them, you can't get them anywhere anymore. Rent them in advance or buy them. It's also very Dutch though that if you could not get any skates, someone who is resting for a while will lend you his or her skates (if they fit ofcourse). And oh yeah: Get rid of your bag, rucksack and items in your pockets. If you fall, you'll injure yourself far worse than without those items on your body.
Love your cat! 😍
The racers on ice skates go up to 50 km/h or just over 30 mph (imagine just leisurely trucking along at 30 miles and this guy on ice skates goes "Morning!" as they slowly overtake you in your car xD). Now, if you're doing the 11 city tour by kayak your speed is about 8 km/h (5mph) and even they have a non-stop version for the full 200 km and a 36 hour time limit. That said, there's no ice, so a lot warmer.
Though there's a multi-day version too, so I think I'll start with that :P
the day to remember so nice, just watching and feel the vibe, amazing,
This is oldschool stuff man, I love it. My dad was only 27 when this was made, two years before I was born and I'm 34.
Every year we hope on a new Elfstedentocht, because the whole country is very happy, Dutch are always on the ice, this year in februari we were on vacation on the Isle Texel, and when we went home, there were skaters everywhere, because it was very cold, it looked like an old painting of Rembrandt van Rijn, your reaction is amazing like always 🥰 greetings from the Netherlands, I’m like you, me and skates are no combination 😂
of course we are emediatly jumping on the elfstedentocht when we're able to hold this spectacle..... can you imagine, its only been 3 times in your lifetime(1985,1986 and 1997) that we could actually do it....its rarer than meeting a unicorn in the wild ! :))
Great channel btw, subscribed !
like there is a predator on earth that would not think "those guys are too crazy for me"
It should be AM. PM would be the time for amateurs to finish in Leeuwarden (I think it's 12 as ultimate finish time).
You & your gorgeous kitty distract me from watching the video 😅😻💕
actuallly there were people who missed a stamp and they were taken out of the results(amd so didnt receive the 11 cities cross), like Piet Kleine. 20 years later they still gave him the missing stamp, but he refused the elf steden kruisje
As he should, no stamp no kruisje ouwe
Some nice facts for you also; the next year in '86 the event was again and with the same winner! In that year also our prince of that time competed and finished! He used an alias so no one would recognise him( he's our king now)
The last event was in 1997 so we are waiting for a new one for quite a long time now!
My grandfather participated in the '63 version. He had always wanted to participate, but after he wished he didn't. He came out alive and without damage.
The winner, Evert van Benthem, now lives in Canada (so he skates on …) 🇳🇱❤️🌷🌷
Evert won 2 times in a row
When the 11 stedentocht began in 1985, my school gave us a day of ijsvrij (icefree). I watched it from 05.00 am till 24.00 pm. My mother made peasoup and the famous stamppot. It was also the first time I was allowed to drink alcohol. A kind of gin (jenever). I was 13 at the time. The 11 stedentocht is so rare even olypian athletes would skip the Olympics just to have the honour to scate it. My only wish is that i have the chance to scate it. But the last time it was held was in 1996... I hate global warming...
Love your comments and your cat as well hahahaha
They even do ice tranplantation! When there is no ice in important places like under a bridge, they cut with a chainsaw big pieces of thick ice from other places and place it where there is no ice. Great invention.
By the way, i was one of the spectators at the finish line in this video. I lived in Leeuwarden.
this is one of the things that bring the entire country together
evert van benthum was an immediate folk hero too
I was there that day, saw start and finish and in between one big party. It was wonderful
Just watching some of your old videos. Your cat is precious!
I wish it would freeze like this again. Would love to see the 11s.t. live...
Love how this starts and ends with the Frisian anthem. Really informative report too. Much love from along the route ;)
A year later during the next Elfstedentocht I was in the military on a 4-night bivouac exercize. Sleeping in a 2-person person tent on frozen ground temperatures as low as -15°C (5°F). As if you were sleeping inside a freezer. I was still trembling when we arrived back at the barracks and after a warm shower.
Koud hè?
For me it was the first time i saw it on television. i was a primary school teacher at that moment and we watched it live on tv with all the children. Haha even your cat likes it, how sweet!
I did not have to work that day, so I watched it , was GREAT, fantastic.
They cut up the ice like that to make it more smooth, it's natural ice meaning it isn't as flat as a ice skate ring would have. If you would have all those bumps on the ice and together with pitch black night.... Yeah that will cause a serious problem. Think about skaters tripping and seriously hurting them self's, in that cold it could spell death. So making it flat will ensure less trouble over all.
Tough isn't quite cutting it, this tour is more a hell on ice. If you are a spectator you will have the chance to freeze to death. For the skaters injuries, hyperthermia, limbs getting removed due to frostbite and death. Yes, people going crazy to participate in this on their own free will.
This isn't a team thing, everyone is on their own. However the tour riders do help out everyone that fell or need help. The ones that wish to speed and 'win' this tour will not stop for ANYONE or ANYTHING. It's go go go all the way. If you get in the way, you will get pushed out of the way.
18:30 Those mats and rugs (yes the same you would find in your house) are there so they can get on land and over to the other side of the ice. It's called "klunen" (klúnje in the Frisian language). They don't stop, just run on your ice skates on the boards and over to the other side. If you stop you will damage the skates more. Yes, this is a hell on your ankles.
They don't stop to sleep, this is done in a single day. Leave at 5 AM arrive around noon. No rest for the racers. For the tour riders it can easily become 8 PM or in some cases midnight before they arrive.
And to make it clear, it's not just Dutch people that do this tour. I met people from all over the world that joined in, Including Americans, Australians, Russians even people from South-Africa. They all came in to participate.
I participated myself as tour rider in 1997, managed to finish as well. I was only 14 then. Kids these days complain that it's cold while only 10 Celcius above freezing point. I managed to arrive at 4:50 PM, meaning I was rather quick for a teen as well.
I was watching it on tv the whole day. Greetngs, Roelof,
Hahahha I love when I'm skating on a canal and have to duck down for a bridge. It feels like such a smooth and cool thing to do.
Great reaction thank you
The little cross is the main prize!! it proves you made it to the end!!! only those who also finish get one!!
It was my first year in secondary school. I can remember I skated a lot and waking up early to see the start with hot chocolate and hot porridge. Going to school being able to see the race at televisions all over our school and finishing our day at about 12PM to see the first people finish and go ice skating ourself. Good memories!
Ps you may also be interested in a movie about this event of 1963. It was -20 centigrades: De Hel van '63
I have one thing to say HC ,.......what a adorable cat you have
This is probably the winter I learned to skate at the pond in front of our apartment at 4 years old. I love those memories, the whole neighborhood would be out on that pond.
I was in highschool in a little town in Friesland in 1985. We did have to come to school but instead of classes a big screen had been set up in the cafeteria and we all watched the tour.
And yeah, too much snow can be a problem. Snow on the ice works as isolation, preventing the growth of more ice beneath.
I'm just guessing here, but the part where they were cutting up the ice, were probably ridges in the ice. You don't want to have people tripping and tumbling over eachother with essentially sharp blades strapped to their feet.
As a side note, not sure if it was this edition or the 1986 one, but our current King also participated and finished the tour. Mad respect for Prince Pils.
yeah, i was there at the finishline both 85 and 86 (as a spectator) . i spend my teen years in Leeuwarden. a spectical indeed. the freezing cold gave me a whole new perspective of the word "snowballs" :-)
At that time I stayed with my wife and at her parents whom were living about 3 km's away from the finish line. I was 29 yrs than and we just could walk to the event. A complete part of the highway, just near the frozen waterway, was used for all the facilities for television, portable studio's, telecommunication and whatever they needed.
The best view we had on television at home, but just seeing al the activities was very special.
3:32 The summary, for those who like short videos, is this couple of sentences: "People are ready for this" and "That's pretty intense..."
Yeah, it is.
My father participated in the tour of 1985 (this race) and the 1986 race and still has both crosses , I could never do that, I am as fit as a beanie bag chair.
Wat a lovely cat you have. Falling in love allready.
Hi. In this 'elfstedentocht' the 18 year old prince Willem Alexander, the current Dutch king, participated as a 'tourer'. He did this incognito under the name 'W.A. van Buren',. But halfway through the tour the public and the media already had recognized him.. He had startingcard number 1.
Anyone noticed at 14:12-14:13 minutes the contestants skates? Friese doorlopers, wooden skates you bind under your shoes - boots....
Yup, we used to go to my grandmother's in Franeker to watch. We'll never have one again, I reckon.
dutch myself, but hadn't seen that docu beforee. nice video man!
there are no teams , just skate for yourself. . professionals and just skate lovers, A farmer won this year and the next tour too EVERT VAN BENTHEM he went to canada years ago,
still a farmer, has cows, and is still famous. the last winner, was a spruit farmer , ha ha henk angenent, in 1997 .great that you show this . its dutch proud .
fun fact...
when the dutch king was just a young prince he actually completed one of these city tours aswel.!!!
That jazz version of the Frisian anthem though. That's on fire!
this is so beautiful to watch! my granddad skated 3/4 times, 1 of them in '96 the elfstedentocht didn't actually took place but he skated it anyway. also, my dad skated the tocht twice, the '96 tocht included. so the official '97 elfstedentocht was very unique. we still have the small cross in our cabinet
I hope we get a really cold winter this year, skating on natural ice is the best. Last year we could skate on natural ice for a few days, but the ice was only 6 cm and not the required 15 for the eleven cities tour....
It is our biggest event, imagine 1/16th of your country is physically going to watch this live in somewhere in that 200 kilometers course!