Magazine
Are these guys nuts? Crawling along a rope stretched high above the highway...
Illustrative photo
Is a small group of Czechs embracing a dangerous new sport? This week it
was reported that a small team of climbers has been practising crawling
along a rope stretched horizontally above a major highway as cars and
trucks zoomed below. One of the climbers said that the highway was only
one site that had been crossed: he and his eight-member team, he claimed,
had also crawled hand-over-hand above high-voltage tracks. So far, no one
has ever caught them as they operate late at night dressed in military
fatigues.
I don't know about you but hopefully this is one pastime that won't catch on: crawling hand-over-hand over certain death - also endangering drivers - seems about as bright an idea as grabbing hold & jumping onto fast-moving trains, another questionable "hobby" reported on a few years ago. There, a group of anonymous surgeons spent their nights jumping onto and riding transport trains like they were hobos in the Depression-era.
I spy with my little eye: a squirrel!
For the second year in a row, Czech children have been taking part in a
unique project called "Prague Squirrel", aimed at counting the
number of squirrels in the Czech capital - part of an on-going census for
a non-profit organisation. Since last year 700 squirrels have been counted
in Prague by people calling in or sending text messages, with the more
detail the better: time of day, location, type of tree, as well as other
bits of information like the squirrel's size and colour. It turns out that
most of the bushy-eared creatures live in Prague's Stromovka Park and
another part of the city known as Dablice. There's a red European squirrel
who lives outside my window, but I haven't called in about him. Yet.
Kids most vocal in new "family-friendly" stadium sector
Photo: Michal Sula, MFDNes, 3.4.07
Things can sometimes get a little heated at Sparta Prague's famous
football stadium: I'm not talking about warm spring weather, I'm talking
about the atmosphere when the home team is behind. Some of the language
commonly used by fans - which I won't repeat here - is enough to make
anyone think twice about whether they should take their kids to a football
game. Now, no more need to worry about innocent ears. Last weekend the
Sparta football club opened a new family sector at Letna stadium where
everyone can enjoy the goals, whether Sparta's winning or not. There is
even a small play area for kids to kick or toss around their own ball if
they feel on top of their game. So far, parents have greeted the idea
favourably: the zone was completely full shortly after opening for the
first time. Who were the loudest? Not die-hard fans but some first-time
viewers: a bunch of eight-year old kids.
Czech wins world's "toughest" human-powered race
Jan Kopka in Alaska, photo: Jan Kopka's archive
Speaking of sport, it isn't too long ago that this year's Iditarod Trail
Invitational - what some have called the world's toughest human-powered
race along the historic Inuit trail - was won by a Czech. Held in Alaska
in the coldest winter he won the race on his mountain bike. The rider, Jan
Kopka, must be made of extraordinary stuff: how else could you survive, let
alone win, a course lasting 1800 kilometres in -40 degree degrees Celsius?
I feel cold just saying it. The racer told a Czech newspaper that at times
on his bike he reached speeds of 80 kilometres per hour with the help of
strong gales, along what he called an old gold-diggers' path, where he was
completely alone. At night he slept in a special sleeping bag by the side
of the trail and told the press, the main thing is just to
"survive". Well, if I was going to do the Iditarod I think I'd
prefer the famous dogsled version: I can't change flat tires with mittens.
Internet news site readers fail to get April Fools' joke
Photo: www.idnes.cz
More than a few readers of one Czech Internet news site must have felt a
little sheepish after they fell "hook, line & sinker" for
one of the site's April Fools' jokes. On April 1st the site reported that
Prague's famous Nusel Bridge would soon have an electronic toll, keeping
track of vehicles coming in and out of the city. A photo, featuring city
hall's logo and the "proposed" toll booth had some readers
up-in-arms, and they fired off responses before they even got to the end
of the article. They should have read all the way through. The article
wrapped up by saying: the current plan proposed by the city was expected
to come into effect by next April...Fools'.
Yes, but will they still call it CzechTek?
CzechTek
It's no joke for Czech techno fans but that's the way it is: organiser
have announced that the CzechTek techno festival won't be back this summer
- at least not in the Czech Republic. Organisers are complaining that the
previously illegal festival has lost its "edge". Last year it
was held with permission from authorities at an empty military site, a
year after police forcibly closed it down, leading to violent clashes.
Although tens of thousands of young people attended last year's peaceful
event, some are complaining that getting permission went against the whole
idea of the fest in the first place. In the past, the chosen location was
always a secret until the last minute.
If CzechTek does move abroad, it will be further east. Locations reportedly being considered are Ukraine and even Belarus. While no doubt some Czech fans will probably be sorry, others - like villagers here who've put up with the festival before, will probably breathe a sigh of relief.
Jan Hus statue disappears!
Statue of Jan Hus on Prague's Old Town Square, photo: CTK
The famous statue of 15th century religious reformer Jan Hus on Prague's
Old Town Square has disappeared! Well, not literally, but under a pile of
scaffolding where it remain hidden for at least a year. The City of Prague
began extensive renovation on the statue, after experts revealed the
massive work's base was no longer stable, and that the statue itself had
also been damaged over the years. Now, the only ones who will be able to
get any view of it for some time will be professional restorers and of
course the occasional pigeon.
Tourists to hit Prague at Easter holidays
Photo: CzechTourism
Prague is expected to experience the first big influx of tourists during
this weekend with the Easter holidays. Reports from one of the country's
main tourist associations have suggested that a whopping 300,000 tourists
will hit the Czech capital. Visitors from Germany, Italy, Great Britain,
and Spain are expected to spend hundreds of millions of crowns altogether.
Many are expected to be over 35 years of age and will probably be
interested to learn more about typical local traditions. For example,
traditional braided whips have of course gone on sale, which are used to
symbolically (!) whip girls on Easter Monday in line with an old fertility
rite. Often many forget that in return, the girls then get to pour a bucket
of water over the guys' heads. Important to remember!






