What Happened To The Dutch Strippenkaart

Strippenkaart

Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to mourn the passing of the humble Dutch strippenkaart (strip card) as it passes on into the realms of nostalgia to be replaced with the new electronic OV-chipkaart (public-transport chip card) system. Many of you who have gathered here to pay your respects will remember our friend the strippenkaart as a simple means of exchanging money for transportation on Dutch trams, buses and metros. I would like to share some of my memories of it with you too.

I first encountered the strippenkaart in the summer of 2001 when I arrived in Holland as a young and confused expat. I had only been in the country for two hours when I first tried to board a tram and buy a ticket. It was then that I was presented with my first strippenkaart. It was only a small strippenkaart, barely more than a strip, just enough to travel one zone but I was instantly intrigued by this system of transportation payment. It was so new and fresh too me. I think it was something in the way the driver smiled at me and stamp my ticket that reminded me of a simpler happier time, when the teacher would stamp my work with a little star to show that I had done well. From that moment on the strippenkaart had a special place in my heart.

Later, I discovered the larger strippenkaart, the kind with 16 strips that could be used for traveling through even more zones whenever I wanted. At the same time I also discovered the large yellow self stamping machines. At first it was a relationship of some confusion as I tried to work out how many strips I was supposed to stamp for the amount of zones I wanted to travel. However, I eventually came to understand the system (after a lot of very cheap travel and one encounter with a tram ticket inspector).

I will always remember the feeling of accomplishment I felt when I had filled a strippenkaart up with stamps, my desire to shout ‘bingo’ upon doing so and collect a prize from the driver for getting a full house.

I will also remember listening fondly to the *klunk, ding* of the older stamping machines as they stamped the strippenkaart of early morning travelers with the date and time, the sound of which always making me think of a drunk north pole elf with a peg leg stumbling across a wooden floor.

*Klunk, ding, klunk, ding, klunk, ding*

Yes. I will always remember the good times… and so should you my friends.

It is also important that we do not hold any feelings of hostility towards the new OV-chipkaart system. It might feel like it has taken our beloved strippenkaart from us and now fills our ears every single day with the, “don’t forget to check in and check out with your public transport chip card,” announcement at almost every single stop in both Dutch and English without even saying a simple please or thank you. I to hear that announcement so often on a daily bases that I have started to hear it in my dreams, over and over and over again…

*cough*

What I mean to say is that despite all of that it is important to remember that the OV-chipkaart did not ask for the responsibility of filling such large shoes to be thrust upon it. We must give it time. After all it will be there to confuse the next generation of expats on their first day in Holland as the strippenkaart did with me.

Yes, we will morn but we must also celebrate and remember. I know I will…. Farewell my friend, strippenkaart… You will be missed.

Stuart

Stuart is an accident prone Englishman who has been living in the Netherlands since 2001. Even his move to the country was an unintentional accident, the result of replying to a cryptic job advertisement he found one day in a local British magazine. Since then he has learned to love the Dutch (so much so that he married one of them) and now calls the country home. He started the blog Invading Holland in 2006 as a place to share his strange stories of language misunderstandings, cultural confusions and his own accident prone nature.

22 Responses

  1. Invader Stu says:

    Welcome back Gez

    I think we red heads get the short end of the stick. We burn easy and bleed easy… maybe evolution is trying to tell us something :p

    I’ve not tried using the OV-card still inside my wallet. You can bet I’m going to give it a go now.

  2. Lily says:

    The whole not needing to take it out of your wallet thing sounds like it works like the Oyster card.

    I don’t know anything about the OV-kaart. I see the machines at the train station but nobody has mentioned that I need to get one and our buses don’t have the machines. I guess I should investigate it more.

  3. Dave Hampton says:

    I felt kile I’d arrived when I mastered strippenkart usage: it only took two years to work up the courage to find out how to get a card, how to fold it, where to fold it, when to punch it. There isn’t a guidebook in the world that tells you how to do this ritual… rdtcaep..

  4. Invader Stu says:

    Lily – I’m not sure if every where in Holland is using them yet. At least it means that for now the strippenkaart survives on in some part of Holland.

    Dave – I think they should give you a hand book when you step off the plane that details all the strange little things like this in Holland.

  5. Anita says:

    I do not take the metro so… as long as I can I will be using the strippenkaart at buses & trams. I like to get stamps. Your trips cost more with the OVcard and it completely alienates you from the price of things. I am going to buy morestrippenkaarten now by the way !

  6. Dragonlady says:

    How do tourist get on? Do we have to buy a card. At least it will save us buying things in shops that we don’t need just to get enough change for a ticket machine at the train station.

  7. Invader Stu says:

    Anita – It’s a good idea to stock up on them. They could be worth alot in the future.

    Dragonlady – It’s the same as before for tourists. You still pay on the tram but instead of getting a small strippenkaart you get another kind of card. Trains have not changed at all yet.

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