Magazine
The Czech Republic boasts the only stone guitar in the world. Czech fashion designers fight for a place in the sun. And -why have Czechs sent a barrel of their best beer to Brussels? Find out more in Magazine with Daniela Lazarova.
Photo: Blesk
It may be mid-November but here in central Europe the weather remains
unseasonably warm. On some days temperatures hover around 14 degrees
Celsius - and it is nothing unusual to see roses in bloom. Many trees have
started budding, there are mushrooms to be found in the country's forests
and most amazing of all - journalists who visited Ostrava, in the eastern
part of the country, found a garden where late strawberries were still
ripening in a strawberry patch. Last year at this time the country was
covered with snow and skiers filled the country's tourist resorts. This
year November has already broken a temperature record from 1920 and
meteorologists say that the rest of the month will be mild as well. Colder
weather is not expected until around December 10th.
Photo: Blesk
There are some strongman feats that it is advisable not to try - and that
doctors don't like seeing. Czech strongman Jan Knotek specializes in
records that are only for people with strong stomachs. Last week he pulled
a car - an Alfa Romeo - for close to three meters by his eyelids! "The
hardest part was inventing a flexible spring mechanism that would let my
eyelids take the weight," Knotek said. He has several bizarre records
to his name - including pushing a car with the help of a pitchfork the
prongs of which rested on his chest.
Imagine building a model railway landscape that would take 30 years to
complete. Train enthusiasts in the west Bohemian town of Plzen set
themselves this task in the grey and dreary days of the communist
"normalization" period - the notorious 1970s when party
hardliners went about stifling any opposition to the regime and erasing
any reminders of the Prague Spring reform movement. It was a time when
most people retreated into themselves - turned their attention to their
families and put their energy into their country cottage or their hobbies.
Building a model railway - the biggest in Czechoslovakia - seemed like a great idea. What the railway enthusiasts did not know was that by the time it was finished Czechoslovakia would no longer exist and they would be living in a free country. The model is reminiscent of the 1970s. It covers an area of 50 square meters and has 750 meters of tracks, several railway stations, tunnels, bridges, towns and landscape. There are 45 trains altogether, which need to be operated by six people simultaneously. In other words - it's a treat.
An exhibition of tea and coffee cups dating back to the beginning of the
17th century is currently on show at a gallery in Brno. There are over 400
pieces on display - stone cups, tin cups, silver cups and china - loaned
from various castles and chateaux in the region. The oldest date back to
the early 17th century and the nobility used them mainly for hot chocolate
- a drink that the Spaniards brought to the Czech lands from America. But,
by all accounts, it was not very popular, since back then it was prepared
in the American Indian fashion with chili and without sugar. It was not
until the 18th century that hot chocolate was replaced by tea and coffee.
Tea was then considered far more precious than coffee. It was far more
expensive and in many households it was consumed as medicine. This is also
documented by the fact that in the 18th century tea cups were much smaller
than coffee cups. And in Oriental fashion - they had no "ears".
The Czech traffic police have spent a million crowns on a "Hands
On" campaign aimed at encouraging Czech drivers to keep their hands
on the steering wheel at all times. More than twenty percent of all
accidents on the road are allegedly caused by the fact the driver was
using a cell phone, eating or tuning the radio at just the moment when a
rapid reaction could have prevented a crash. The Hands on Campaign will
appear on radio spots, billboards and DVD films.
Stepan Rak playing a stone guitar
The Czech Republic boasts the only stone guitar in the world. This unique
instrument was chiseled by stone cutter Jan Rericha from a precious type
of marble found in Guatemala which is said to be 250 million years old. It
took him three months to make and the guitar is fully functional since
marble is said to have resonance qualities similar to wood. The guitar had
its premiere this week - at Pardubice chateaux where one of the Czech
Republic's best guitar players Stepan Rak gave a concert of classical
music. He was delighted with the instrument but said he wouldn't care to
play it on a regular basis. "It's a hefty task given that this guitar
is five times heavier than a wooden one," he said.
Foreign Minister Alexandr Vondra and the barrel of the best Pilsner beer, photo: CTK
Pilsner beer is considered to be one of the Czech Republic's best
ambassadors and - the Czech Republic plans to send a big barrel of the
best Pilsner beer to Brussels to show its opposition to a proposed rise in
EU alcohol taxes.
Hopefully officials in Brussels will get the message. In any case Czech
Finance Minister Vlastimil Tlusty - who will head to Brussels alongside
the barrel for a meeting of EU finance ministers - has already said that
Prague is prepared to veto the proposed tax rise. Since every country is
said to be defending its national beverage it will be interesting to see
what the others will bring - and how the meeting of finance ministers
goes!
Photo: Prague Fashion Week
A new generation of Czech fashion designers is fighting for a place in the
sun - but they say it is an uphill struggle. The twice yearly "Prague
Fashion Week" now attracts plenty of potential clients whose
purchasing power has climbed in the last decade, but designers say that
only a small elite is willing to spend larger sums of money on clothes -
and often the well-off turn their attention to established Western
designers. The majority of Czech women - not to mention men - are still
pretty conservative in how they dress and very pragmatic, a trend that
designers ascribe to the "uniform" communist era. While two out
of three Czechs claim they want to wear something original, in reality few
of them head for fashion boutiques, preferring to spend their money on
sports clothes in one of the many department stores. As Czech designer
Daniela Flejsarova says - "A Parisian woman who wants to give herself
a treat will buy a new coat - a Czech woman will buy a new washing
machine." Maybe Czech women should start putting themselves first for
a change.






