At the mention of Holland, many people have not the most unambiguous associations: drugs, coffee shops, the Red Light District. But the Netherlands is also beautiful towns, magnificent canals, mills and gorgeous nature. In general, it is worth going there and seeing everything "live".
Instructions
Step 1
There are several ways to get to Holland. The fastest and most comfortable is, of course, flying by plane. You can fly both by Aeroflot flights from Sheremetyevo airport and by Dutch airlines, whose small airliners depart from Domodedovo airport. The flight time is 2 hours 30 minutes.
Step 2
But to get to Holland by long-distance train without transfers will not work. You have to take the Moscow - Munich train, which departs from the Belorussky railway station in the Russian capital, and then change to the Munich - Amsterdam train.
Step 3
The second option is to take the Moscow - Berlin route and then change to the Berlin - Amsterdam train. Travel time will be 35 hours.
Step 4
According to the third option, you need to buy a ticket for the Moscow - Hamburg train, and then change to a comfortable train, which runs from Hamburg to Munich six times a day.
Step 5
There are people who do not like airplanes due to the fact that nothing can be seen from the windows except the clouds and the sky. And that is why they prefer the slow, but very interesting option - a bus ride. Once a week the flight "Moscow - Amsterdam" leaves from the Belorussky railway station and passes through Ukraine, Poland and Germany. Seeing several countries in one trip is very tempting for many. Moreover, the travel time will be about 65 hours.
Step 6
There are travel lovers who simply adore visiting different countries in their car. In order to get to Holland by car, you need to drive through the territory of Ukraine, Poland and Germany. And from the German city of Dusseldorf to Holland is generally a stone's throw.
Step 7
There is also a second option for traveling by car - to move through the territory of Belarus, Poland, the Czech Republic and Germany to the very German-Dutch border, which is practically not guarded.