Renting a Dutch bike and riding the flat, car-free dike past the windmills is the most authentically Dutch thing you can do on this exact stretch of land — mills on both sides, a working below-sea-level landscape, and the freedom to ride the full Overwaard/Nederwaard loop. A bike covers far more of the 19-mill spread than walking and gets you to the quiet far end where the tour crowds thin out and the postcard sightline along the Overwaard canal opens up.
What to expect
You'll start by walking ~500m from the entrance to Cafe De Klok on Molenstraat to pick up your Dutch bike, then pedal onto the flat, car-free dike path where windmills rise on both sides and the working polder landscape unfolds beneath your wheels. The route loops past all 19 mills across the Overwaard and Nederwaard sections—a distance that would take hours on foot but opens up in minutes by bike. As you ride deeper into the quiet far end where tour crowds disappear, the postcard sightline along the Overwaard canal reveals itself: pure, unbroken Dutch countryside. The rhythm is unhurried and sensory: the creak of the bike, the scale of the mills, the flat horizon, and the freedom to stop wherever the light and mood strike.
No ship equivalent exists — cruise lines don't offer a bike-it-yourself option, so this is a direct-only experience. At ~$12 it's the cheapest way to see the most of the landscape, and it turns a flat walk into the active, full-coverage version of the port day. Lowest-cost, highest-freedom move here.
Good to know
Rent your bike directly at Cafe De Klok (no advance booking needed, €10 flat for any duration) and plan 2–3 hours for a full loop ride at a leisure pace. The dike paths themselves are free to ride; add the ~$22 site entry only if you want interior mill tours or boat access. Allow 45 minutes total for the walk to the cafe, the bike rental, and return to the pier, so aim to head out within the first 2–3 hours of your port window and be back by hour 5–6 to ensure a safe buffer before ship departure. Wear comfortable shoes for the initial walk and bring sunscreen and water; the dikes offer no shade and the Dutch sun reflects off the water.