A focused first encounter with the Ypres Salient, the corner of Flanders where the Great War left its deepest mark. In 3 hours an a half your private guide takes you from the Menin Gate, where the names of nearly 54,000 missing soldiers are carved into stone, out across the battlefields that surrounded the town. You stand at Essex Farm, the dressing station where the words of “In Flanders Fields” were written, walk the long white rows of Tyne Cot, the largest Commonwealth war cemetery in the world, and end at Hooge Crater, the front line where the trenches lay only metres apart, with a visit to the small de Vinck Chapel that quietly remembers the men who fought and fell on this ground. This is not a list of dates. It is the human storey of the men who lived, fought and died in this small, scarred landscape, told quietly and honestly. Travel is door to door in a premium Mercedes V-Class, with hotel pickup and drop-off included. Ideal if you have half a day and want to understand what happened here, why it still matters, and where to look. A respectful, unhurried introduction for first-time visitors, families and anyone tracing the footsteps of a generation that went anyway.