Thursday, January 29, 2009

I blog in Prague.


I have been in Praha for one week. After a few travel bumps, delayed internet setup, various "orientations" (I am still not really very well-oriented), and the discovery that I can still upload pictures to my computer without the proper cord (yay, memory cards!), I can blog in Prague (rhyme!) for the first time.

Warning: it will be rather unfocused, as I am rather unfocused. Right now I cannot help but be stuck in the tourist stage, snapping pictures of everything that I think is pretty (which is, virtually, everything, at least in Old Town rnd around the Castle) without having a speck of knowledge. So for now, I suppose all I can offer is a few pretty pictures (though I am no competition for the photography students here).

My first night in the cab from the airport I spotted the Dancing Building, and though I (along with many Praguers, I think) don't find it appropriate for its location, really, it was nice to see a little bit of Frank Ghery. The building isn't credited solely to him (I forget the other guy) but it is still very distinctly Gehry, and made me feel that maybe I wasn't too far from home/school (thinking on his MIT building--I wonder how the Dancing Building fares in Prague's weather?) after all. (Ha!) Modeled after Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.

It's pretty cool, but it's not the architecture you come to Prague for. What kind of architecture do you come to Prague for? The old kind. My second day here I got to Old Town Square, which is composed of old architecture. (Duh.) Huge tourist attraction: the astronomical clock. As the hour approaches, tons of tourists (including me probably about four times already) gather to see the windows in the tower open while wooden figures of the Twelve Disciples (Apostles? Same thing, yes?) rotate on by. See right for detail. It doesn't include the disciples, but is a better shot than any that do.

During our scavenger hunt orientation (which lasted for six hours -- jeez Louise) as well as our Prague tour today we, of course, visited the Prague Castle, across the Charles Bridge. Rather than one huge structure, it's actually more like two towns surrounded by fortification--Lower or Lesser Town, and Castle Town, I think? Not only is the Castle across the River Vltava, but it is also up a hill. Quite the hike, but well worth it for the views of the city as well as being walled in with so much history. It's hard to really appreciate it in a group. I cannot wait for (at least slightly) warmer weather to venture back on up and try to soak it all in a little better.

Here: my view from the Old Church in the Castle's Lower Town. In the foreground is the Black Plague Column, with the great Gothic cathedral peeking and peaking dark in the background.

I guess enough guide book business for now. Apologies for the dry text. (I haven't gotten very grounded or involved in the city just yet.) Hopefully the pictures help it out a bit...? I should probably settle into bed soon--rest well for my last day of intensive Czech. (Only moderate Czech after tomorrow, I suppose. Which will still be uberdifficult. Alas.)

And so I leave you with the images of the unpleasant--a fantastic gargoyle/drainage pipe from the Gothic cathedral--to punctuate all of the pleasant above. (Hopefully the two will cancel each other out. Or maybe the pleasant will even prevail.)


Dobrou noc!

3 comments:

  1. What a great message, Caitlin!! It is so good to be able to see what you are seeing. I remember seeing that clock with the 12 Apostles on the Travel Channel -- really amazing! The Dancing Building is quite unusual -- not what you expect to see in Old Prague, I'm sure!

    Dobrou noc! to you, also. I'm hoping that that means something like Good Night or Sweet Dreams and that it isn't an old Czech curse.

    Miluji te, Gaia

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  2. keep on putting up pictures of things that i'm going to see when i visit you in april!

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  3. caitlin those pictures are beautiful! and i am totally planning on coming to visit you. either spring break or something in the even nearer future :) and we can take prague by storm (though i'm sure you've already begun the process!)

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