Category Archives: 2006 europe

Recap: Prague Walking Tour

alright, so we made our way back to prague – we ended up walking about 2 miles along the railroad tracks to the main station because there weren’t many trains running – i felt like i needed a red bandana and a stick.

one more thing about prague – the main station is the armpit of the earth. i remember getting off here a couple years ago and thinking ‘why did i come here’. it’s full of bums of neon lights and casinos. it’s a shame, because upstairs there is a beautiful art nouveau dome. my guide book said you could get a cup of coffee at the cafe and watch male prositutes selling their wares. i didn’t see any, oh well.

walked around admiring the square at night – oh – and on this weekend, there was a basketball tournament called the ‘european final four’. i think it was the euroleague – teams from greece, germany, spain, italy, russia, israel…to name a few. there was an impromptu pep rally for the israeli team on the main square. they were beating drums and singing, etc etc. all around the city, you would see people with scarves of their teams around their necks – kind of like for soccer games.

i love these little baroque pastel houses:
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tyn church is even more foreboding at night:
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town hall tower w/ cheesy astronomical clock:
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alright, so the next morning (sunda) i had to check out at 11. i got up early to head over to the jewish quarter, since i didn’t spend much time there last time and i wanted to get into some of the synagogues and the cemetery. actually it’s a good thing to do on a sunday morning because since it’s jewish, it’s open…

from 1439-1787 this was the only burial ground allowed for the jews of prague. it’s a very small space – maybe less than a block in area – and since the custom says the body should not be moved once buried, the graves/tombs were piled on top of one another til it became about 12 feet above street level. there are 12,000 people buried there. as the earth settled over time, the stones became crooked.
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it was a rainy, somber cool morning indeed. so i walked back to the square, took another snap of the tyn church:
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and went inside and caught part of the 10am mass, from the back of the church. couldn’t take pictures inside – so no photos – but it was beautiful and even though i didn’t know what was going on, it was neat to watch.
well – my going in must have done some good because when i walked out, the clouds were GONE and the sun was out in full shine – it was gorgeous!
old town hall – note the right side of the pink facade – bombed out during WW2.
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baroque hussite church, church of st. nicholas:
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not so gloomy anymore – adam and eve towers of tyn church:
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my favorite pastel houses again:
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walking towards the charles bridge from the square:
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i made my way along the bridge – the merchants populate this thing during the sunny days, selling stuff to tourists – i usually go for the artists with the lithographs of the city sights or watercolors – and i think last time i got this neat little ceramic flute (that i have no idea how to play but it’s beautiful). this is the place to see the view of prague castle, where the czech president lives:
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the bridge is lined with statues like this one – that all have stories to tell:
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caught the tram on the other side of the bridge and went up to the botanical gardens on the way to the castle. took a nice walk through the gardens to spy on st vitus cathedral, first sone laid in 1344 – and home to the tomb of st wenceslas (from the christmas carol) and the bohemian crown jewels:
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pictures stop here – i walked over to the main gate, where a lot of the crowds gather. took a seat on the fountain next to the 3 guys called “Prague Castle Orchestra”. they’ve been playing the castle square for years – the self proclaimed smallest orchestra in the world. the music was perfect for admiring the beautiful castle grounds, watching the changing of the guard, and looking over the city.
after a brief sit – made my way back to the tram and found my way back to the guest house (one last long ass walk up that hill from the river). i had about a 4 hour train ride to my next destination, in the very southern part of bohemia, also along the vltava river – cesky krumlov.

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Recap: Prague & Kutna Hora

so, i haven’t really talked much about what i did while i was overseas – it’s one of those things – you’re gone for so long and when you get back there is so much to tell that you end up not wanting to talk about it – or so many people ask you questions you tell the same thing over and over again.
i finally got my snaps uploaded and need to actually take the time to write captions and remember stuff – so here’s the first installment – 4.28 & 4.29

PRAGUE
got to prague pretty late – got delayed from CLT by 2 hours and missed the connection in frankfurt, had to camp out in the airport for 4 hours. by the time i got to prague, i was tired and sick (from the laryngitis i got right before the trip) – couldn’t have found a better place to stay – nice little 12 room guest house in a residential neighborhood. did the hostel thing when i stayed in prague for a week in 04, and pretty much never left the old town/castle area. this time was different – got some peace and quiet and things were cheaper!! it rained and was miserable for those first couple of days, so i was glad to know my way around and just be able to relax and do whatever, not on a schedule.

the tyn church on old town square – pretty bleak looking, architecture echos the weather:
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more blah – gate to charles bridge, actually without crowds
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prague castle, which is one of the most beautiful skylines in europe i think (obviously not represented in this snap)
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Alright – the next day – off on a side trip to

KUTNA HORA

I heard about this place last time from a hostelmate – we tried to go out there but in 04 my czech wasn’t as good as it was this time (oh it still sucks but it was way better). seriously, the more you travel, the mo’ better you learn to get around :)

so, i found it in a book and read about it and had it all figured out. basically, KH is a small old silver mining town that gets a few tourists. the weird thing here was the Sedlec Ossuary. bones of 40,000 people decorate the inside of this church. ok it sounds weird, but there is a good story that goes along with it. so, back in the 13th century, a monk from Sedlec visited the holy land and brought back some dirt. he sprinkled the dirt in the area that was once the cemetery (where the bone church is now). all the silver mining rich people wanted to be buried in the cemetery when they passed because of this – cue the plague in the 1300s and the hussite wars after that and you had a heck of a lot of bodies in one small space. so in the 16th century they dug a bunch of people up, built a gothic church on the site, and later added a baroque style entrance. the bones from the skeletons were literally piled in heaps in the basement – the ossuary. til one day in the 19th century a family told a carpenter to “straighten up”. this is what he did:

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the chandelier – which contains at least one of each type of bone in the human body – weird…
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dont worry no plans to redecorate my house:
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On some of the skulls you could actually see holes and cracks – where the warriors were struck on the head during battle and died… It was something to stand there and look at all of the skulls and imagine them as real people and what their lives must have been like and what they looked like.
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coat of arms of the family (schwarzenburgs) that, er, commissioned the, er, art.
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and the artist left his mark:
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in this small po-dunk czech town:
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that was about it for kutna hora. ate at neat place called Pivnice Dacicky – good local czech beer and lots of medieval style food (read: meat). the walls were covered with medieval murals and the tables were large and heavy wooden ones with benches. the cool thing – a local wedding party popped in and we got to clap and sing with some italians. had no idea what was going on. i think i wrote about this before – sounded like happy birthday to me. wish i would have gotten some pictures….what was i thinking. anwyay, was neat to get involved with some of the local customs!!!

next installment – finishing up in prague and off to cesky krumlov!

2006 Europe Trip

You’re invited to view the pictures from my 2005 trip to Europe! Head on over to Flickr!

The Pope @ Auschwitz

ok, so i have very basic cable – where i get the regular network channels plus things like OLN (outdoor life network – yay hockey playoffs!), Lifetime, Hallmark, and other crap. one of the other channels must be what i like to call “the catholic channel”. on sunday morning while i was getting ready to go to raleigh, i was flipping through and i caught the coverage of the Pope at Auschwitz. it was just amazing to think that i had been there three weeks ago and there was the Pope walking in places that i had been. the whole time, he maintained a very solemn and stoic face.

the most memorable part came while he was in Birkenau at the memorial towards the back of the camp. there are plaques representing each of the nations that had countrymen die within the camps. it was a rather gloomy and rainy day. as the Pope walked among the memorials, stopping to say a prayer in front of each plaque, the rain stopped and the clouds started to break – and the most beautiful rainbow appeared above the camp.

i think that even those that don’t believe in anything will find it hard to deny the divinity of such a symbol.

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The Pope in Poland

for the record, i’m not Catholic. i’m not Jewish either. i am just facinated with the history of the region. anyway, the Pope is on his 2006 Poland trip. for those of you that don’t know, Poland is the home of his predecessor, John Paul II. he is in Warsaw until he arrives in Krakow at 8pm Friday. i can’t wait to see the pictures because i will actually be able to recognize the places. i think it would have been neat to have been there during this time and to have gotten a chance to see him – but from what i hear, it is going to be a mob of people, so it’s probably best that i missed it – i mean, i think i have already seen enough police in riot gear with machine guns at the train station to last me for a while. anyway, the Pope is visiting Auschwitz on Saturday, which is extremely important since this makes him only the second Pope to have visited the camp. John Paul II transcended 2000 years of bitterness and dissent to improve the relations between the two religious groups – hopefully Benedict XVI will keep this effort alive.

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