Prague in October

It's time for me to catch up in recounting many anecdotes from our life in Prague thus far in October.

We all went on a walk on a sunny day in the park Obora Hvězda:

A few weeks ago I broke fillings in teeth on the left side of my jaw, one on top, one on bottom. I put up with it for a few days, but getting food stuck in gaps made my jaw hurt, so I brushed and flossed and stopped eating, but eventually I got hungry enough to listen to Erin's advice and make a plan to go to the dentist and get the teeth fixed. On Monday morning after our Czech lessons I stopped by Stomatologické centrum at Vodičkova 30 without an appointment, asked if they spoke English, which they do, and waited while they checked to see if any dentist had availability. Normally they don't take emergency visits, but I told them I had several weeks and wasn't in a hurry. (I would have been glad to come back for an appointment if needed, since I had learned how to eat only on the other side of my mouth and avoid making my teeth hurt.) After only 10 or 15 minutes, a dentist was able to see me. I don't remember her name, but she was great, spoke enough English, tolerated my occasional Czech attempts too, offered to let me skip getting a shot to numb my mouth which I was happy to avoid, and got things done in fairly short order. I couldn't ask for more. And the price was about $85. We don't have dental insurance, so I didn't need to fuss with that. It was great to walk in and get the work done and never schedule an appointment at all. And it's of course nice to eat normally again.

We had a very nice visit from much of the Gottschald family I met in Jena, Germany, in 1992 when I was a missionary there. They have grown, and now have Russian and Italian contingents, and had a cousin visiting from California as well. They visited Prague for a few days and we had a great time walking around, talking, and seeing things:

I am often easily amused by small things. For example, I went to a bankomat (ATM) run by the bank Česka šporitelna. Unlike many other ATMs here, it only offers its services in the Czech language. That's ok for me, but may be a bit rough for a visitor with no Czech experience. But the fun part is that it offered 3 choices of bill combinations when withdrawing cash! My choice was either all big denomination bills, a mix of big & small, or mostly small. Useful and kinda neat.

Whenever we see these old water pumps around town we try to pump water out, but haven't gotten any to work yet, sadly:

Česká pošta (the Czech postal service) did a great job delivering a package to me in spite of the shipping label having a mangled Ř at the beginning of our street address Řeznická 14:

The kids and I had a great time one Saturday visiting the Prague transport museum. There were (literally) tons of interesting old vehicles to see: trams/streetcars, buses, trolley buses (overhead electric line powered), subway cars, a reconstructed old train station, and lots of historical write-ups. We are big fans.

Afterward we walked back towards home past the huge Prague Metronome in Letná Park. The kids were in awe of all the shoes thrown over the electrical wire leading to the metronome:

I had a nice conversation with a German man who walked up to me and asked me about the metronome in German. I guess he could just tell by looking at me that I speak German? We talked for quite a while. And at one point Lillian corrected me when I said we live in der Altstadt, since we technically live in der Neustadt. Hmm. She's decoding the secret language ...

I got to see Karlovo náměstí, a metro station I hadn't seen before even though it's fairly close to us:

We visited a church that Phin and Lillian had earlier found on a walk, Church of the Virgin Mary and St. Charles the Great (Kostel Panny Marie a svatého Karla Velikého), which is interesting in that it has a dome with no pillars supporting it, and a really neat "grotta", a recreation of the Bethlehem cave. Here are a few external views of it:

It is near a large bridge that has a metro line on its lower level, and car and foot traffic on top with great views over Prague:

On the way home we went through the old castle Vyšehrad, which has a nice view over the Vltava river:

That wasn't surprising, but this snowboard & skiing competition in the middle of the city on a not particularly cold autumn day was surprising:

Jacob, Phin, and I went to see the American band El Ten Eleven (see also the Wikipedia article on them) play at the legendary and tiny Klub 007 Strahov, which has been in operation since 1969 in the basement of a student dorm block house. The opening was by Czech band madebythefire who were interesting and very talented. After the show we got to talk with the guys from El Ten Eleven for a while. They're very nice. This was the first show of their first tour of Europe.

El Ten Eleven is a duo that uses pedals to set up loops and effects. I liked a lot of their songs, but especially fun was their cover of Joy Division's Disorder. Here's a YouTube video of them playing it a few years ago:

One day while running near the Vltava river I came across this church with the plaque that reads:

V tomto kostele působil v letech 1874–77 hudební skladatel Antonín Dvořák jako varhaník

(In this church in the years 1874–77 musician and composer Antonín Dvořák functioned as organist)

Last week Erin and I got to go to the Freiberg LDS Temple in Germany with our friend Sharon Wilkinson from church. We met in front of the Rudolfinum in Prague, and Sharon drove. We went on all sorts of small back roads and it was a rare treat for us to get out of the city for a while.

This is a school near our apartment on the appropriately-named Školská street:

Today Erin, Jacob, Phin, and I went on a walk and ran into an interesting monument honoring Jaroslav Hašek, author of The Good Soldier Švejk:

We were on our way up a hill to see a national monument to Jan Žižka, a Czech reformation war hero:

That's a ridiculously big horse statue.

Comments

  1. Awesome pictures. Looks like fun. I like that weird horse/bust statue. It made me smile. The kids look great. Is Lily really decoding the secret language? That's impressive. They are really getting some great exposure to all the languages. I'm terrible at even figuring out WHICH language I'm hearing. Our day at Universal in Florida, we were surrounded by foreigners speaking all sorts of languages. Daniel's better at guessing which language than I am.

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  2. We found a water pump kind of like that up in an area where there were a bunch of abandoned copper mines in central Idaho. We were about 7500 feet in elevation. We pumped for awhile and got it to work. It was pretty cool.

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  3. Ivy, it is fun to guess what languages people are speaking when out and about. I bet you're better at it than you think, at least for some languages!

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  4. Chad, was that up by Copper Basin? We've got to take a trip there together when we're back! It's a beautiful area.

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  5. i love reading your families blog posts. It's like we all get to go on the epic adventure.

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