I
wonder how many of you have heard of the Eleven City Skate Tour (the Elfstedentocht). This
tradition is about as Dutch as wooden shoes and apple pie. Every winter,
die hard fans are keeping their fingers crossed, hoping that the
temperatures will drop well below 32 degrees long enough, for the ice to
be thick enough, so people can skate over the frozen rivers and canals
that are connected by 11 cities and towns. Measuring the ice, is an
event in itself, it has to be exactly 6 inches thick, or more. The last
time this happened was in the cold winter of 1997. This is almost 20
years ago. Lately, Dutch winters have been un-seasonably warm, thanks to
global warming.
How did this tradition come about?
It
was in 1909 that the first official Eleven City Tour happened. One of
the founders, Pim Mulier, of this event had figured out the route in
1881 and he then did skate this route himself, but it wasn't until 1909 that
it became a national event. The tour starts and ends in the city of
Leeuwarden. The tour is about 125 mile long, with temperatures well
below 32 degrees and with wood and metal skates, it was very hard to do. The
winner of that first tour was Minne Hoekstra and it took him 13 hours
and 50 minutes. There were plenty of frozen earlobes and toes all around!
After
this first tour, there have been only 15 times up until now, that the ice has been thick enough for the tour. The second tour was in 1912, and it took
the winner 11 hours and 40 minutes. The next one was in 1917 and after
that it took until 1929, before another tour happened. In 1933 there
were 2 winners with the exact timing of 9 hours and 53 minutes.
During
the 2nd world war, the winters were famously cold and the war didn't
stop the tours from happening in 1940, 1941 and 1942. After the war, the
tour happened only 7 more times: in 1947, 1954, 1956, 1963, 1985, 1986 en 1997.
This
last tour one my uncles rode the tour (ome Ap), in 1997 and the winter was extremely cold. Temperatures were
below 20 degrees and the windchill was about 0 degrees. With the modern
skates of today, the winner finished the route in 6 hours and 49
minutes.
During
any winter, when there are a few days of freezing weather, people and
newspaper articles are starting to speculate if this winter will be the
one where another Eleven City Tour will be possible. It seems like
people enjoy the speculation more then the actual tour. Here below you
see a video I found on youtube, with footage of the Eleven City tour in
the very cold winter of 1963. I hope you enjoyed this little bit of
history of my home country!