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Current AffairsCzech Republic to have more primeval forests

13-07-2006 14:25 | Daniela Lazarová

Virgin - or primeval - forests are rare in this part of the world where logging and tourism have taxed Nature to a considerable extent. Now there are efforts to try and restore Nature's bounty for future generations. In addition to protecting existing nature reserves Czech environmentalists are trying to create new ones. If all goes well in several hundred years' time there should be new primeval forests in the north and eastern parts of the country.  More

ABC of CzechThe touch wood lesson

25-03-2006 | Pavla Horáková

Hello and welcome to Radio Prague's special Czech-language series focusing on idioms about wild-growing plants. We've already done trees and their parts, and today we won't go far from that topic - we'll be looking at the words "wood" and "forest" in Czech phrases and idioms.  More

Current Affairs"Christmas Tree - Tree for Life" project brings silver fir back to Czech Republic's forests

21-12-2005 15:09 | Pavla Horáková

Every year, almost a million Christmas trees are sold in the Czech Republic. Soon after the holidays people throw them away and the trees have to be disposed of as waste. For the sixth year running, environmentalists in Brno are offering people the chance to buy live Christmas trees which can be replanted outdoors after Christmas. Also, they've chosen one particular type of conifer, once plentiful in the Czech lands but now on the verge of extinction.  More

Talking PointA Black Triangle gradually turns green

15-11-2005 13:07 | Eric P. Martin

Photo: European Commission North Bohemia was once the member of a most unlucky club. Together with neighboring areas of Germany and Poland, the region was considered part of the "Black Triangle," so named for its unenviable position as one of Europe's most polluted areas. But since the fall of Communism, the Czech region has been dealing with the consequences of unrestrained industrial growth that poisoned its skies and depleted its once-thick forests. In this week's Talking Point, Eric Martin visits the region to find out if it can lose its "Black Triangle" nickname.  More

Current AffairsCzech Republic getting greener as forest area increases by thousands of hectares every year

16-08-2005 14:30 | Dita Asiedu

The Czech national anthem describes the Czech Republic as paradise on earth, boasting waters murmuring through its meadows and forests rustling over rocky hills. Well, it looks like the country is delivering on its promises - in just forty years the area covered by forests has increased by 50,000 hectares.  More

Czech ScienceCzech Science

16-08-2005 14:00 | Pavla Horáková

Czech Republic to support research in nanotechnology. Czech high-school students succeed in international science competitions. "St Wenceslas" mushroom kills fir trees. Bat populations increasing in Sumava Mountains.  More

Current AffairsPrague renovates ten old gamekeeper's lodges

05-08-2004 | Dita Asiedu

The city of Prague, as a popular tourist destination, attracts millions of people thanks to its rich cultural heritage, historical monuments, beautiful architecture and its romantic little streets and cafes. Although it is known as one of the "greenest" capitals in Europe, few people are aware that Prague includes some 4,900 hectares of forest land. Around half the land is owned by the city, which spends some 36 million crowns - 1.2 million Euros - a year on maintenance. For over a decade, it has also owned ten run down gamekeepers' lodges but has only recently been given the green light to renovate them and offer its rangers homes close to their forests.  More

Czech ScienceEnvironmentalists plan to grow new "primaeval" forest in North Bohemia

03-08-2004 | Pavla Horáková

Photo: www.novyprales.cz A group of environmental activists get together, scrape up some money and buy a piece of land that has some remarkable features: endangered animals or rare plants - and turn it into a private preserve. That is not so unusual anymore in the Czech Republic. But cases when conservationists and botanists decide to turn a completely ordinary piece of land into something valuable are much less common.  More

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