PLEASE NOTE: Price is per person and based on two people sharing a twin/double room. Single room supplements and upgrades are not included.
Itinerary
4-Day Itinerary
Day 1
Local departure by coach or Door-to-Door service, then on to Ypres where we stay in the centre for three nights.
Day 2 - Passchendaele & In Flanders Fields Museum
More than 250,000 British and Commonwealth soldiers died at Ypres during the First World War, and we begin our visit by driving up the iconic Menin Road via Hell Fire Corner out onto the ground where the fighting took place.
We explore where Scottish troops fought in 1914 at Black Watch Corner and visit the impressive memorial, walk into Polygon Wood, and see an original German bunker, the nearby cemetery, and the Australian and New Zealand Memorials.
At Tyne Cot Cemetery, we see the largest British and Commonwealth Cemetery in the world, and then examine one of the most controversial battles of the conflict: Passchendaele. We see the Canadian Memorial and ground around the village where the fighting occurred in 1917.
After lunch at Hooge, we visit the In Flanders Fields Museum, one of the most important WW1 museums in the world.
We return to the battlefields and see Essex Farm where John McCrae wrote the poem ‘In Flanders Fields’ in 1915, and end at Yorkshire Trench, a preserved British front-line trench found in archaeological work here during in the early 2000s.
In the evening, you have time to attend the moving Last Post Ceremony, just a five-minute walk from the hotel.
Meals - Breakfast
Day 3 - The War Underground & Messines Ridge
We start this morning at the so-called Aristocrat’s Cemetery at Zillebeke where officers were buried in 1914, many of them from titled families. We then look at the fighting for the key position at Hill 60, examining the War underground and seeing preserved mine craters and bunkers.
We then visit The Bluff; located alongside the old Ypres canal, this was also an area of mine warfare and heavy fighting, and here we see impressive mine craters and the visitors’ centre.
After lunchtime at Hooge Crater Café, with time for the excellent museum and reconstructed trenches, we travel down the Messines Ridge and have an included visit to the German trench system at Bayernwald, a place where Adolf Hitler fought in 1914.
Later, we see the Spanbroekmolen Mine Crater, now the ‘Pool of Peace’, and end at Ploegsteert, or ‘Plugstreet’, where we visit the Ploegsteert Memorial and discuss the story of the Christmas truce in 1914.
Meals - Breakfast
Day 4
Return home.
Meals - Breakfast
5-Day Itinerary
Day 1
Local departure by coach or Door-to-Door service, then on to Ypres where we stay in the centre for four nights.
Day 2 - Passchendaele & In Flanders Fields Museum
More than 250,000 British and Commonwealth soldiers died at Ypres during the First World War, and we begin our visit by driving up the iconic Menin Road via Hell Fire Corner out onto the ground where the fighting took place.
We explore where Scottish troops fought in 1914 at Black Watch Corner and visit the impressive memorial, walk into Polygon Wood, and see an original German bunker, the nearby cemetery, and the Australian and New Zealand Memorials.
At Tyne Cot Cemetery, we see the largest British and Commonwealth Cemetery in the world, and then examine one of the most controversial battles of the conflict: Passchendaele. We see the Canadian Memorial and ground around the village where the fighting occurred in 1917.
After lunch at Hooge, we visit the In Flanders Fields Museum, one of the most important WW1 museums in the world.
We return to the battlefields and see Essex Farm where John McCrae wrote the poem ‘In Flanders Fields’ in 1915, and end at Yorkshire Trench, a preserved British front-line trench found in archaeological work here during in the early 2000s.
In the evening, you have time to attend the moving Last Post Ceremony, just a five-minute walk from the hotel.
Meals - Breakfast
Day 3 - The War Underground & Messines Ridge
We start this morning at the so-called Aristocrat’s Cemetery at Zillebeke where officers were buried in 1914, many of them from titled families. We then look at the fighting for the key position at Hill 60, examining the War underground and seeing preserved mine craters and bunkers.
We then visit The Bluff; located alongside the old Ypres canal, this was also an area of mine warfare and heavy fighting, and here we see impressive mine craters and the visitors’ centre.
After lunchtime at Hooge Crater Café, with time for the excellent museum and reconstructed trenches, we travel down the Messines Ridge and have an included visit to the German trench system at Bayernwald, a place where Adolf Hitler fought in 1914.
Later, we see the Spanbroekmolen Mine Crater, now the ‘Pool of Peace’, and end at Ploegsteert, or ‘Plugstreet’, where we visit the Ploegsteert Memorial and discuss the story of the Christmas truce in 1914.
Meals - Breakfast
Day 4 - The Trench of Death & Behind the Lines
This morning, we depart for the Flanders coast and see the Nieuport Memorial to the Missing, looking at how British soldiers occupied the trenches here at the top end of the Western Front, alongside the beaches.
We look at the Belgian Army in Flanders, visiting Ramskapelle, and then the Trenches of Death, a whole system of front-line trenches preserved along the Yser Canal.
After lunchtime in central Dixmude, we visit the impressive German Cemetery at Vladslo, with sculptures by Käthe Kollwitz showing parents morning for their fallen son, just as she and her husband did when their son Peter died here in 1914.
We then examine life behind the lines in Flanders and visit the town of Poperinghe to look at the subject of men who were ‘Shot at Dawn’. We visit Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, one of the largest in Flanders, and here look at the story of women who served as nurses, and the role of the Chinese Labour Corps, also having time to see the visitor's centre.
Meals - Breakfast
Day 5
Return home.
Meals - Breakfast