Act 1 (Prague)
Right then. Shall I get on to writing an actual account of my holiday with cheeky, now that more than a month has passed? Why not, it should be fun to see if I can actually remember anything. I won’t bother to put photos in here, since it seems like a lot of effort when most of you have already seen them on flickr, so I hope you don’t find all this text too dense. Or find me too dense. Or whatever.
When we got to the airport, I found out I’d left my camera at home. I felt particularly clever. Cheeky savoured the moment, because apparently she is usually the one who forgets things or makes silly mistakes on holidays. As may be observed as this story continues, she certainly managed to pass that mantle to me quite effectively (although reclaimed it rather spectacularly on her final day in
The flight was uneventful except that I made us sit next to a smelly guy. Oops. Due to the delayed flight, though, it was nearly 11pm when we landed in
There was a very helpful guy with excellent English on the hostel reception desk, who insisted on telling us where everything was and giving us a free map on which he very helpfully marked all the most useful tram routes, and then we took our key and headed up our room. Or rather, our 8-bed mixed-gender dorm. Which we couldn’t see at this point, since the lights were already out, people were asleep and we just had to dive into bed quickly, but I will describe here anyway. I think our hostel (Sir Toby’s, for anyone who wants a recommendation) may be one of the best I’ve ever stayed in – very helpful, very friendly, and with tons of atmosphere because of being in an old town house with high ceilings, large windows and wood panelling. Also extremely cheap, at about £12 per night for a bed in one of the dorm rooms. There was a well-equipped kitchen if you wanted it, but when we dragged ourselves out of bed the next morning we decided to try their breakfast for an added £4 ish each, because we just couldn’t be bothered. Turned out that their breakfast was very cool and included things such as cooking your own pancakes or scrambled eggs.
Neither of us really knew what one was supposed to do in
The main, ceremonial sort of parts of
At this point we thought we’d better go and buy our train tickets for getting to Venice the next day, so we walked right through the centre of town (via Old Town Square, if I remember correctly) to the main train station. Where we found the most unhelpful ticket desk woman ever, who listened to what we wanted, consulted her computer and then just said ‘No.’ When pushed for a little more information, she elaborated to ‘No. No train’ and pointed us in the general direction of ‘away.’ Hmm. Luckily, when researching this train journey, I’d emailed a travel agent based in the station (thanks to tripadvisor forums where I saw them mentioned) and so we looked around until we found ‘Wasteels.’ Which had an extremely helpful man on the desk who both spoke excellent English and also knew that what was going on was that there were engineering works, and thus no direct train. However, he sold us our tickets (at which point I got to rub it in a little that I am younger than cheeky, since under-26s get cheaper tickets) and printed us out a little schedule showing where we would first be getting the local train to, the destination that we then needed to catch a bus for, and the times for getting everywhere (Venice arrival time was exactly the same – we would work out how this could be a day and a half later, when desperately trying to sleep whilst being shunted around Salzburg station for an hour). Happy with actually being able to get to Venice, we left the station and wandered back through town, crossing the Charles Bridge as a few raindrops fell, and eventually realising we were cold and exhausted and not getting anything out of it. We caught the tram back to the hostel and found a local food shop to sell us such necessities as pasta, tomato sauce and tea. Although we upset the checkout girl a bit by not weighing and labelling our tomatoes, and then failing to understand her Czech instructions to please do so. Oops. Cheeky was happy though because we had found Cinnamon Toast Crunch, which you don’t find in Britain and which she was quite happy to consume in preference to all other food. We may have also stocked up on such necessities as large bars of Milka. Mmm.
Back to the hostel, and time for dinner. By this time one earworm had been replaced by another and for goodness knows what reason we were now both being driven up the wall by our brains’ incessant repetition of Umbrella. Aaaaargh. Luckily, my mobile had a few songs on it which it can play through a tinny little speaker, so while we had the kitchen to ourselves I played us It Never Rains In Southern California. This is an excellent earworm because it’s not annoying but it’s really catchy, and it pretty much stayed with us for the next week and a half – being judiciously used to squash Umbrella or In My Life whenever they tried to make a reappearance. Anyway, we made dinner and I made sparky fire in the microwave. Oops. I had failed to notice that the waxy cardboard tetra-pak which our passata came in was foil-lined. Well, it made for a little excitement…unlike the pasta, which we rather overcooked and had to force our way through. Ah well. We had originally thought that once we had had dinner, warmed up and regained some energy, we’d go back into the city in the evening and see the views of the castle and Charles Bridge all illuminated at night that are so famous. But…we didn’t. Bed seemed like a much more appealing idea.
On the Friday morning, we discovered that the hostel’s teabags made much better tea than the ones we’d bought… so we swapped some of ours for some of theirs. We packed our stuff, handed our key in and bought a single-use tram ticket to the station, where we left our bags in lockers manned by an overly-friendly security guard who really seemed to want to talk… Having escaped him, we walked through town again and this time did our best to see the sights, such as the astronomical clock striking the hour and all the environs of Old Town Square generally. Cheeky spent time making friends with the carriage horses waiting at a stand – for which she was rewarded with slobber all down her jeans. We peeped in the
This theme continued, as despite convincing them to get on the same train, they did keep popping along to check that we were still in our compartment – oh yes, a good old continental train with proper compartments of 3 seats facing 3 seats, enclosed with a door and very reminiscent of Harry Potter – you know, if the Hogwarts Express had been built under communism. At around sunset, our train stopped and we headed out into a small town and followed print-outs stuck to lampposts saying “Bus” and the like. Unfortunately, it then turned out there were three buses waiting for those of us who’d got off one train. Nobody in charge who spoke English (or indeed spoke at all that I noticed – it may just have been that nobody was in charge) so we were all milling a bit pointlessly for a while. Cheeky and I noticed that one of the buses had a piece of paper stuck in the window which said Horni Dvoriste, which is also what our kindly-printed-by-Wasteels schedule said. So we caught that one – and convinced the still-confused Americans to do the same – and sat on it trustingly as it drove us ever further into the deepening night in the Czech countryside. As it turned out, we were rather lucky in all of this because the other two buses did not go to the same place (which we had assumed) and as ours got us to the correct train… I don’t know where the others went. Anyway, train! Hurrah. With sleeper compartments! Hurrah – except that they were sleeper compartments made for hobbits. Skinny hobbits. The seats are not comfortable to sit on as seats and are certainly not comfortable to lie on as beds. I suppose I should be grateful that we could lie down but… I’m almost not, given how impossibly hard and narrow they were. Anyway, I’m skipping ahead of myself as we’d only just had dinner (warm and soggy cheese & tomato sandwiches – good thing we made them though as no food available on the train) when we boarded the train, which we were now rounding off with some cinnamon toast crunch. Our guard/ticket collector came round, sleazed at us a little in bad (Italian) English, then came back and sleazed at us a lot more while implying he could get us a compartment to ourselves if we bribed him. We refused that, trying not to laugh in his face, and then he showed us how the compartment door worked. Or rather, he very effectively showed us how it locked. He was less successful at getting it to unlock. This left him trapped in the compartment with us, repeatedly whacking the door to and fro and expecting a different result each time. It continued for probably a whole 5 minutes, by the end of which he was literally backing away from the door until he met the window, then charging the door and kicking it with all the force he could. Constantly muttering under his breath about ‘firma Italia’ – I think, cheeky and I were struggling far too hard not to dissolve into a hysterical giggle fit that I really wasn’t paying attention. Oh, so funny. Eventually, with the help of someone from a different compartment, he got the lock to unjam and escaped. Looking a little shamefaced, and dropping the sleaze, he suggested we move into the next compartment and then vanished totally, presumably so he could pretend that that hadn’t just happened. Which cheeky and I were quite fine with. Deciding that we weren’t going to sleep well on this train and might as well be tired before we tried, we discussed lots and lots of tv and eventually started playing the game that later made it onto the board at biped’s insistence – if 4 fictional characters were locked in this teensy tiny compartment, predict the outcome. It is a lot of fun, especially when you chuck superpowered people or mindreaders into the mix. Hee. That game alternated with shag/marry/push off a cliff, which turned into frak/marry/die by the end of the night. I would like to report that both of us married Mercer Hayes, but we really had no other options. And he is rather charming. Ahem. After midnight, as we arrived in


1 Comments:
You write very well.
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