Magazine
Nothing like a tomato battle to beat the blues! A keeper at Prague's zoo risks his life to save a baby gorilla -and a father and son catch a 36 kg big head on a white bread roll. Find out more in Magazine with Daniela Lazarova.
Photo: CTK
The town of Radvanovice held its 3rd annual tomato battle over the weekend.
Close to a hundred people of all ages took part with 13 tons of very ripe tomatoes at their disposal. Those who were eager for more could follow that up with a free for all in a tub of ketchup. "When we first saw it in Spain it looked kind of crazy but we decided to try it ourselves and you know what - it's huge fun," one of the participants said.
Rosh Ha'ayin Park
A park in Prague's first district has just been given a very exotic name -
Rosh Ha'ayin. It's a name that few Czechs can pronounce correctly, much
less spell - but it is official. The Prague 1 town hall said it had named
the park after an Israeli town with which it had recently established ties
and officials said they hoped people would get used to it. There has been
plenty of interest from the media, but the locals are not enthusiastic
about the new name. "It's not a very good idea - all the streets
around here have Czech names and for many people here -especially the
elderly inhabitants - Rosh Ha'ayin is simply too exotic to remember. No
doubt people will soon give the park a name of their own liking and Rosh
Ha'ayin will just be the official version" one of the locals told
journalists. But then, you never know - so if you hear someone saying they
are off to Rosh Ha'ayin - they are headed for Prague 1.
Photo: MF Dnes, 30.8.2006
A Prague zoo keeper risked his life to save a baby gorilla from drowning
last week. Moja - the first ever gorilla to be born in captivity at Prague
Zoo fell into the moat surrounding the enclosure and was floating with her
head down when the keeper appeared with their morning feed. "I didn't
stop to think about the danger," Marek Zdansky says, "I jumped
into the water to save her. Just a few years ago in the devastating floods
of 2002 one of our gorillas drowned and it was I who found him. For a
moment I felt a terrible dread that history was repeating itself. But when
I pulled Moja out and shook her and she started screaming and I knew she
was safe. It was then I realized that I was in big trouble - standing an
arm's length from the group of gorillas who had watched the whole scene.
None of them went in to help Moja because gorillas can't swim but they
could have attacked me - especially the male Richard who weighs over 300
kg and who is very unpredictable. But they just sat and watched and seemed
to understand that I was helping them. Then Moja's mother came and took her
from me. She ambled away with her and I got out as fast as I could."
It was Moja's first contact with a human being, just one day after her
second birthday.
Photo: Miroslav Homola
A father and his 13 year old son went on a fishing trip they will never
forget. The fish they caught in Palava Lake in south Moravia was so big
they fought it for a full forty minutes. "When the head first emerged
we thought it was a huge catfish but then I realized it was a big head - a
giant big head," Ludek Smrtnik says. The fish weighed an impressive
36kg and was 1m 29cms long. And you'd never guess what the bait was - a
bit of white bread roll.
In just a few weeks' time visitors to Prague will be warned at every turn
to be wary of pickpockets. More warning leaflets are to be put on trams
and busses, stuck on Prague lamp-posts and even someone having a beer in a
Prague pub will be alerted to the danger. The police has arranged for
thousands of special beer mats to be printed with a warning in Czech and
English which reads: Remember pickpockets are everywhere! The mat depicts
a white handkerchief with one corner tied in a knot. Now this is likely to
be a mystery to many foreign visitors but it actually refers to the Czech
saying that you should make a knot on your handkerchief so as not to
forget to do something - something along the lines of tying a string
around your finger to remind you of something you wanted to do. Most
Prague pubs have agreed to use the beer mats - so when you see one -you'll
know what it means.
The Charles Bridge in 1965, photo: MF Dnes, 31.8.2006
The Prague Town Hall is gradually restricting traffic in the city centre.
But there are people who remember the days when cars and trams drove
across Charles Bridge and Old Town Square without any restrictions.
Traffic was first banned from Old Town Square - a ban that was imposed
from one day to the next - in 1960 when experts found that trams in
particular were doing serious damage to houses on the square and Celetna
street. At the time, trams and cars were still driving across Charles
Bridge. The bridge was made off limits to traffic five years later when
the famous Gothic landmark underwent a major reconstruction. Tram lines
were dug up and never replaced -and sometime later cars were banned from
the bridge as well. People could hop onto a tram on Wenceslas Square up
until 1985 after which traffic was gradually restricted - but now the city
hall is seriously considering bringing trams back to the square.
The Old Town Square in 1960, photo: MF Dnes, 31.8.2006
The Wenceslas Square in 1985, photo: MF Dnes, 31.8.2006
Photo: CTK
Madonna has big fans in the Czech Republic. Those who cannot afford a
ticket to her Prague concert (the cheapest come at 6,000 Czech crowns ie.
over 300 US dollars ) are willing to do just about anything to get one for
free. Private radio stations are giving some out for free as prizes in
various crazy competitions. In order to get her hands on a ticket
fifteen-year-old Veronica Lucivnakova from Velke Mezirici covered her body
with honey, rolled around in feathers then ran around the town square for
an hour while passers-by gaped at her and photographers documented the
event. "It was worth it - she told reporters later - I would do
anything for Madonna!"
A homeless man who'd bedded down in a garbage container for the night can
thank his lucky stars that he's still alive. The man was inches away from
being sliced to bits by the rotating knife built-in the garbage van. The
man was hidden beneath cardboard boxes and rotten fruit from a nearby
outdoor market and would have escaped notice, were it not that the driver
who has a camera in his cabin noticed a human arm moving amidst the
garbage and stopped the compressor mechanism just in time. The homeless
man, whom local officers have nicknamed Colombo, escaped with a broken arm
and is now said to be back with his street friends - telling them how he
escaped death by the skin of his teeth - moreover on a street called
Soudni or Judgment Street.





