Tuesday 23 September 2008

A tiny Pisa Firenze

Previous night's trip had made sure this wasn't going to be a relaxed holiday. We had gotten back from Venice at 8am and had to be on our train to Florence at 10am. That left us with just enough time to take a breather, shower, have breakfast and head on back to the station which we were sadly feeling home now. The train ride to Florence was 3 hours long and fairly uneventful. The train itself was a swanky new Eurostar, much better than the ones that run from London.

Upon reaching Florence, we immediately picked up tickets on the next available train to Pisa. Pisa is only an hour away from Florence and I hadn't come this far not to see the much talked about leaning tower. There isn't anything else to do in Pisa other than the leaning tower, so we figured a total round trip to Pisa of 3 hours should do fine. Having gotten to Pisa we took a local bus ticket. Anusha insisted that we buy just a 1 hour ticket since we will be back at that station by that time. Even the ticket clerk expressed his surprise as the express nature of the visit and reluctantly gave us a 1 hour ticket. Luckily for us, there was a bus just about to leave for the tower complex and we quickly boarded that. 10 minutes later, we were at the Piazza dei Miracoli "Square of Miracles". The piazza has four main buildings: the Duomo, the tower, the Camposanto monumentale ("monumental cemetery") and the Baptistery.

There and a bunch of shops and cafes. The tourists are totally set up here. I bet these places are twice as expensive as any other place in Pisa. For the next 20 minutes or so, we were happy snappers, clicking away some pictures of the tower: from the front, the back, the sides, everywhere, with us in the frame, without us in the frame and so on. Hey we were still better than about a hundred others there that were very eagerly shooting the famous leaning on the leaning tower or holding up the leaning tower position. I clicked one of Anusha with those folks in the background, just to capture the whole silliness of it.

I had heard mixed things from people who had been to the tower. Personally, I thought that the tower was much more impressive in real life than it is in the pictures. It is leaning a fair bit, some by design and some not. I do think its definitely worth a visit if you are in the area. Happy with the captured set of pictures, we grabbed a slice of pizza and some gelato and were back at that station within our ticket hour to catch our train back to Florence. We still had the whole of Florence to explore.

We were back in Florence by 4pm and walked into the tourist information center housed in this old historic building. Whatever happened to inviting people with a smile. Any tourist center we have been to in Europe with the exception of Milan and Stockholm have really grumpy people running it. They are no way helpful or nice. Rather I think they go out of their way to be mean to tourists. After a hiss and a grunt, she finally parted with a map. When asked what are some of the key places to visit given that we had limited time. She refused to help, pointing to the map and saying "It's on the map". After that very helpful conversation, we decided to follow the map and go to the nearest and what seemed like the top place to visit, florencja-fort-centrum kongresowe. The doors of the fort clearly said - NOT OPEN TO TOURISTS! Now this is the kind of information that is not on the map that I would expect a helpful person on a Tourist Information center to impart to tourists and we weren't the only ones there. A bunch of people walked away from those gates disappointed.

Not to be deterred, we continued on what was going to be our walk tour of Florence. The city center isn't huge and is very walkable. We walked by many of the sights, quaint streets, old houses, silly statues and piazzas and ended up on this street with an amazing view of the Duomo.

It looked as if someone had painted a huge stage background of the Duomo. The entire Duomo looks is very well painted and dressed up with modest gold paint in places. The small building right opposite the Duomo has a gold plated door with each of the gold plates being the canvas for amazingly detailed paintings.

The whole Duomo Piazza is a key attraction and opens up to the main shopping street with all the major name brands and nice little cafes. This is where Anusha had a plateful of the best pasta we've have ever tasted. It did Tuscany proud. We walked on further through some more narrow and beautiful streets, a small local produce market and ended up at the Palace square, where we sat and finished the rest of the pasta and took some pictures.

Our next stop was to walk to the famous bridge, the The Ponte Vecchio (Old Bridge), over the Arno river. This bridge is lined up with houses on either side and we didn't know that we were on the bridge until we got to the middle of it. Believe me, it looked much nicer from the inside than the outside. As per WikiPedia: "It is said that the economic concept of bankruptcy originated here: when a merchant could not pay his debts, the table on which he sold his wares (the "banco") was physically broken ("rotto") by soldiers, and this practice was called "bancorotto" (broken table; possibly it can come from "banca rotta" which means "broken bank"). Not having a table anymore, the merchant was not able to sell anything".

We took a different walk back to the station stopping by a local Italian live concert - where the guitarists were jamming, the drummer was on a roll and the singer was singing really well but just not together :-). Whenever the singer shut up, the music sounded really good.

Anusha was pretty full from the pasta earlier but I was still hungry. On our way back to the station through local streets we ran into a small Pakistani hole-in-the-wall type of place. Of course I walked in :). This is where all the Bangladeshi street hawkers seemed to hang out. I guessed the food was decent.I ordered a full-plate rice with Cabbage and Daal. Amazing quantity and quality for 4 Euros.

Before I knew it, we were back in the station in the ticket line. Seemed like most of our time on this trip was spent at one station or another. We watched a movie on the laptop on our train ride back and made our way back into Milan by 11pm. Tired from being in trains and stations in-between walking around in the cities, we retired for the night and were completely knocked out for the night.

Wednesday 17 September 2008

Paradiso Venezia

Our trip to Venice started off uneventfully but wasn't going to end that way. Little did we know that when we started our day with the nicely filling breakfast at the Splendido. Finished with our breakfast, we walked over to the train station and made our way to the ticket counter to buy tickets for Florence for the day 3 of our trip. Our plan for day 2 was to take the 8am train out to Venice and get back to Milan on the 7:45pm train which reached Milan at about 11pm. We had about 20 minutes to board our trains, got to the ticket counter to our favorite ticket counter lady. The day before, we had established some great hand signals to ease communication since she spoke only Italian :-) She greeted us with a nice big smile and after a few hand signals (the nice ones), we walked having bought tickets for Florence for day 3.

We ran to the train and got into the first available seats that we liked since we weren't able to read what coach or seat numbers we were supposed to be at. After about 20 minutes of watching people pass by, we were evicted from our seats, told which ones we were supposed to be on and we made those seats our home for the next 3 hours. Along the way, we were joined by a group of older Irish women travelling around northern Italy for a week. We exchanged travel stories, their dated back since the 1960s. Made for a very interesting train journey into Venice.

It was yet another fantastic day. A warm 28C and sunny.

Getting out of the station in Venice, you are greeted by the glorious Grand Canal. we bought the 12 hour pass, really expensive at nearly 14 euros each. By the way, this was the only tourist information center that didn't have a free map and were selling a basic map for 2 euros.

Standing at the steps of the station, we were thinking how Venice really does look different. Its really amazing to visit a city that was built on marshy lands. Did you know that the city of Venice stretches across 118 small islands, has about 150 canals and 400 odd bridges. We were fortunate enough to visit 3 or 4 of the islands and some countless bridges and canals on this trip.

You have to take the ferry into the city or you can walk. Since we had the pass, we took the main vaporetti (water bus) to the Piazza San Marco and passed some along amazing sights along the water: Beautiful old buildings, Gondolas, other water buses, water taxis running crisis crossing the canals etc.
Piazza San Marco was bustling with tourists. Actually more like splitting at its seams. Any more people and there would have been some falling into the canals. The Piazza is the only on in Venice. All the rest of them are called campi. This is the heart of Venice and has been around since the 9th century. It is lined with state buildings and St Mark Bassilica. We started walking into the city. Small streets lined with restaurants and shops and thousands of people pouring out of every one of the narrow streets. I didn't think the islands could host as many people as it does.

Although there is a map, its not of much use. The really tiny streets aren't even on the map. The only way to really find Venice is to get lost in Venice and we did exactly that. Walked on through streets that had no names, over bridges and by the canals, in and out the various campi. We grabbed food as we walked from one of the many local shops and stopped by a fresh juice store. The guy running the store had been to India 6 times: everywhere from Dharamshala to Gokarna to Kerala. We had a nice long conversation with the dude and fantastic smoothies. Finally he showed us on a map where we were and then found our way back to the Ponte di Rialto (Rialto bridge).

Rialto bridge is the oldest of the four bridges over the Grand Canal and is the beginning of the Rialto Market. Its a bustling part of Venice and definitely an important stop over. Important tip to remember is that the prices in the street shops in Rialto are a decent bit cheaper than most other places in Venice. After a little bit of shopping to buy an Asterix & Obelix made in Murano glass, and a handbag for Anusha, we got back on the ferry to visit some of the other islands. We decided to take the waterbus to Lido island and got some really nice pictures along the way.

History lesson: Murano is a small island just off the main venice island. Earlier all the glass factories used to be on the Venice island and since most of the houses were made of wood, the then rules of venice decided it wasn't safe to have the factories on the same island as the city. So he setup this Murano Island and moved all the glass factories there. However, the factories are not the best place to buy Murano glass. People say its about 2-300% more expensive on the island. Go figure.

We had a bit of something to eat in Lido by the water and then set out on the next bit of our journey. The agenda was to take a road-bus to just go around Lido and were we in for a surprise. The bus ran the length of the island and then got on to a ferry and ended up driving all the way across another island to a small village of Pallistrina. A good chunk of Lido and Pallistrina is all beaches. I am sure it would have been completely packed, had it been a weekend. Of course Anusha must have been a fish in her previous life. The moment she sees water, she hits a level of joy that is seldom seen. We were at a beach and Anusha wanted in. We spent about an hour just walking along the beach. Well in all the excitement of the islands and the beach, we forgot to keep an eye on the time. We were pretty far away from the station in Venice and had to catch the 7:45pm train.

Then the panic began. We had to wait for 20 minutes at the stop to get the next bus that went over the ferry and then took the ferry from Lido back to Venice only to miss our train by 10 minutes. When we went to the ticket counter to get the next train, we found out that the 7:45pm was the last direct train to Milan. We thought of just staying over in venice for the night, but then we had the train to Florence the next morning. We simply had to get back that night.

After about 15 minutes of contemplating and discussions with the Railway assistance folks, we finally booked ourselves on the 11:30pm train which got to Bologna a2 2:30am and then take a connecting train from Bologna to Milan at 4:30am which would end up in Milan at 7:30am. We bought the new ticket and also pushed our train for the next morning back by a couple of hours to 10am.

Things turned for the better after this though. We met two of the nicest people in Venice. One was working the front desk of a hotel by the station. He not only showed us our way to the only Indian restaurant in Venice, but also called them to make sure they were open and made a reservation for us. He talked to us about Venice, its history etc. A really nice conversation.

We made our way to the Indian Restaurant, where we were greeted by this guy from Delhi who was running this restaurant for an Italian lady. The food was great and also he explained to us how Venice really works. About the fact that everything has to come from outside of Venice since there is nothing really in Venice. How the cost structure affects the people who actually live there and how there is a Venice for residents and a Venice for Tourists. Just an example is that the ferry ride that cost us nearly 7 euro would cost a resident 1 Euro.

After the meal and some walking around the streets, we made our way back to the station to start our night journey back to Milan. The night trains in Italy are very much like the Trains in India. The coaches can be compared to the first class AC coaches on a Rajdhani just that the seating structure within the cabin is a bit different. Instead of 4 berths, the cabin has 6 seats , 3 on either side, that would recline and join in the middle to form sleepers. Here we met our third nice guy for the night and we spent the first hour talking about the economic differences in the rich North Italy vs the poorer South Italy. The two hour layover spent in the waiting room in Bologna was painful and the follow on train journey on a very packed train with no reserved seats, even more so. But we managed to find two seats to sit and snoozed lightly while sitting.

We finally made it to Milan at about 8am. Lucklily our hotel was just around the corner from the station. We checked back into our room, quickly showered and had breakfast and got ready for our next train ride, our journey to Florence and Pisa.

Sunday 14 September 2008

Gucci’d and Pucci’d in Milan

Our last trip to Italy was all about Rome. Rome had more than enough to keep even us, an attention-span challenged couple, interested for three days and we still came back wanting more of Italy, its wonderful pizzas, gelatos and people. At one point Anusha and I were debating taking a 2-week backpacking trip though the boot-shaped country, starting off at Milan and making our way through Venice, Florence, Pisa, Napoli and then onto Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica. I know that would have been a wonderful trip but schedule clashes and the impending move to the US made that trip impossible. Not willing to give up completely on our Italian dreams, we decided on 4 days based out of Milan but with day trips to Venice, Pisa and Florence.

We landed at the Milan Linate airport around 10 in the morning. Milan Linate airport is probably has the smallest arrival lounge I have seen in a big city in Europe. The old Bangalore airport was bigger. What is keeping this airport ticking is that its only 7 Kms from the city centre. Talking to people I gathered that it is probably looking at either a major facelift or the same fate as the old Bangalore airport as the new Malpensa airport (56 Kms from Milan) is the bigger airport for Milan and has better connections to different parts of the city.

As usual, we found the best public transport means to our hotel. We had to take a bus to the city centre and then either walk or take any of the other means of public transport to get to our destination. As with any other major European city, Milan has a good public transport network consisting of three Metro lines, plenty of Trams and busses. The bus dropped us off in the city centre and we had our first glimpse of the magnificent Duomo. I will tell you more about the Duomo a little later.

I was a bit suspicious of our hotel in Milan. It’s name, Splendido, sounded more like a Spanish underwear brand than a hotel and didn’t exactly inspire a lot of confidence. It had decent reviews and was supposed to be right next to the central station making our day trips easier, so I picked it. True to the reviews, the hotel was about 100 feet from the central station, has a fancy reception area and very nice and decent sized rooms. The only complaint I have with the hotel, as with the ones in Vienna and Dusseldorf, the AC does not cool! We were early and had to putz around the station square for about an hour eating, watching the pigeons and people before our room was ready for check in. Taking these early morning flights isn’t a time saver really since we end up crashing at the hotel for a couple of hours recovering before we head out in the city. By the time, we made it back into the city centre, it was 4pm.

The magnificent Duomo greets you as you get out of Duomo metro station. It’s a gothic style cathedral made from what looked like White Marble. This whiteness gives is a very distinct look unlike any other cathedral we had seen before. Like with most things, it’s true image cannot really be captured by a camera. It has to be seen in person to get the full appreciation of its beauty.





Beside the Duomo is the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. The GVE is the one of the top shopping arcade of Milan where big name brands such as Prada, Gucci, Pucci, expensive restaurants and McDonalds have learned to coexist peacefully. The Duomo Square was extremely lively and we walked through north from the side of the Duomo through the shops and restaurants and out to the Piazza.

The next stop was the castle (more like a fort). This 800 year old structure has been built and rebuilt multiple times by generations as with the case with any other castle. However, unlike the Prague castle, this one isn’t glamorous at all. It’s a dull red brick building and we even passed by one of the walls in the tram earlier without really noticing it and had to come back to see it. Although our first impressions of this castle weren’t great, it started to work its magic on us as we walked into and around it.







What we needed was to understand the past to bring the present into perspective. This old map of Milan depicting the old city walls and the castle hammered the point home for us. We spent the next hour of so sitting around the castle park people watching.

Exploring the non-touristy parts of Milan was the next item on the agenda for the evening. We transferred a couple trams and took them to the end of the line watching the city unfold from within the tram. We decided to take a bus back so that we take a different route. We looked for a bus which travelled to the Centrale FS. Just to give you some context, we took the bus from the east end of the city and had to get to the north-central part of Milan. A journey of about about 7-8 Kms, 30 minutes max, according to the map or at least so we thought. Shortly after we left, the bus left the map and I could no longer follow where it was headed. We travelled for about an hour and still we were in untraceable territory. Directions for the San Siro appeared and disappeared. That’s what got me thinking, the San Siro is in the West of the city and we weren’t supposed to be West. We finally managed to trace what the bus was doing. We were on one of the city orbitals. We had gone South and then West and now were finally heading North. We were never really off the map, I was just looking in the wrong direction. A little over an hour and a half after we had left, we got off at our stop. Since it was an orbital, had we taken the same bus number one from the other side of the road we would have made our stop in 20 minutes or so, but then we wouldn’t have been able to see the parts of Milan that we did.

There was one episode still left in this chapter. Anusha was absolutely famished after this unplanned journey all around Milan. We got into a local Pizzeria and ordered a Pizza with cheese, onion, tomato, olives and anchovies. Yeah yeah, I know Anchovies is fish. I confused anchovies with artichokes. We asked them if we could change the order but they had already made the pizza. We ended up ordering some pasta and having that instead and paying for the whole lot anyway and also a hidden cover charge. This is one thing to look out for when eating at local joints in Northern Italy. Find out upfront if there is a cover charge. Most places have a cover charge of anywhere between 3-5 Euros on eating in.

I was somehow expecting more from the Fashion capital of the world. The dressing sense for most Milanos seemed either too sleazy or too trashy, maybe because it was a Sunday? The town and the people seemed very unwelcome and cold. I guess there is more in common with Paris than just the craze for fashion. We do have a day during the week as well. Maybe we will feel different about Milan by the end of it?

Anyway, having learned a couple of lessons for the day, we turned in tired and weary. We had to be up at 6am the next day to make our 7:30am train to Venice.

Thursday 11 September 2008

Beautiful Prague - the Czech In

I started off the last post with “We were so tired the night before from the lack of sleep...” but little did I know what was in store for the end of the trip. If you remember the last post, we barely got the airport in time for the checkin, but instead we were Czeched in. Czech airlines first said that the flight was delayed due to the incoming aircraft being delayed but we could all see that the plane was standing right there at the gate. They then proceeded to blame the weather in Prague and then in London. They would come back on the intercom every 30 minutes only to tell us that the flight was delayed by another 30 minutes. Finally around 11:30pm, 2 hours after the flight was supposed to take off, they came back to tell us that the flight was delayed by 8 hours and would fly the next morning at 5:30am and that we should line up at the ticket counter for the next steps.

The tired and somewhat upset passengers in a show of good character lined up at the ticket counter only to be left standing for another hour by the ground staff without any information as to what’s going on. After a few of us disgruntled passengers expressed our anger in the nicest but most forceful of ways, they proceeded to get us a hotel etc.

While we were all waiting in line, one of the passengers who was a ground staff for another airline, let us know that we should ask for a full refund of the flight since EU regulations clearly state that if the flight is delayed by more than 5 hours, passengers are entitled to a full refund. But of course, when we got to the counter, we had to drill the information out of the Czech Airline folks. Reluctantly, they gave us the information needed to get a refund.

At about 12:30am, we were put on a bus and driven for about 45 minutes to get to our “transit” hotel, which was right in front of the place we had lunch the day before. We got into bed by about 1:30am only to be woken up by the alarm at 3:30am and back on the same bus bound for the airport this time. The rest of the flight was uneventful and we came back into London a good 12 hours after we expected to have come in. We filed for the refund but haven’t seen any of this money yet. I doubt we ever will but hey, at least we tried.

It was sad that a really nice trip to a pretty city such as Prague had to end this way. But I still do maintain that Prague is one of the prettiest cities in Europe, just don’t fly Czech Air.

Beautiful Prague - part 2

We were so tired the night before from the lack of sleep and all the walking around town that we basically crashed only to be woken up by the alarm at 8:30am. We were checking out today at noon. We showered and headed downstairs breakfast by 9:30am. The breakfast setting at the Jelini Dvur is small and cozy and comfortable although the choice of Macaroni instead of eggs for breakfast was a bit surprising. That didn’t stop up from filling ourselves up to our nostrils with oj, cereal, coffee/tea and Macaroni.

On coming back to our room, we finished our packing and just chilled out for a couple of hours before checking out at noon. We left one of our bags at the reception and headed out to visit the castle. We had 6 hours and a few things on our list to tick off today. The castle was a short 5 minute walk from the hotel. The castle was a mix of different architectural styles having been refurbished more times than I can count on my hands. It hosts a mini city inside it, galleries, museums, cafes, guardhouses, church etc. We walked the perimeter of the castle, appreciating the view of the city from on top of the hill and walking through an outdoor photo gallery.

The steps from the castle lead to the Lesser Town. Don’t go by the English. It is not lesser than anything else in Prague. Pretty, quaint and well preserved old town at the gates of the castle with cobbled streets, old buildings, fancy stores and cafe’s adding the new touch while still keeping the spirit of the city the way it was in the days gone by. By the way, watch out for the guy hanging out of a ground level window scaring people.

Prague seems to have lived through its shares of fights with tyrants and oppression. Mean kings, the second world war and then the communist “friends”. One voice that acted as a voice against oppression and stood for freedom against the red army for the Czech was John Lennon’s. There is a huge tribute to the legend in the form of a Lennon wall. The wall itself belongs to a monastery who check the wall for indecent content from time to time but allow all things Lennon to remain. There is a spitting image of Lennon carved on the wall. The fans even had a mock burial when Lennon passed on.

Frank Gehry’s designed some crazy buildings. But the dancing house in Prague has to rank as one of the craziest. This one in Prague seems like a safety hazard waiting to happen. I bet if this were in the US, some woman who did not quite see the bent parts of the building would have slipped and fallen and sued Gehry for gazillions of dollars for being dumb.

We had the urge to explore some non touristy parts of Prague and go where no tourist had gone before. We decided to catch the first bus that showed up and go to the end of the line. Boy did we pick the right bus. The tour went through some of the prettiest residential areas of Prague and ended up at, what seemed like, the old forgotten ruin of the Strahov Stadium on top of the Petřín hill. On our way down from the hill we had a late lunch at a very quaint looking pizzeria. The two us shared a salad and pasta.

Taking a roundabout route and a couple of bus changes, we decided to pay the Jewish quarter a visit. There are 6 different synagogues close to each other in this small corner of old Prague. Our plan was to visit a couple of them and buy some bohemian crystal piece from the many stores in the area. Why buy from this area? Well, for some reason the Jewish folks here are more than happy to discount and one can talk a nice bargain if one was familiar with the art. Having been an unwilling apprentice to my mom’s daily shopping exploits in Delhi for the first 20 years of my life, I had picked up a trick or two.

Top tip: The shops in this area sell things a little bit cheaper than the other parts of Prague anyway and easily about 25% less than the duty free stores at the airports. After about 20 minutes of shopping, we negotiated a 600czk for a piece that was marked at 690czk but as with every negotiation, I walked away thinking that I should have beaten them down that little bit more.

Sorry for the digression, getting back to the synagogues now. The old-new synagogue (ONS) supposedly has the remains of an ancient daemon Golem, created from clay by a powerful Rabi about 800 years ago to protect the Jewish population of Prague from a tyrant ruler. Legend has it that the daemon had to be put down by the Rabi because it eventually turned on the Jewish folk after demolishing the forces of the evil king and also that it can and will be resurrected if needed. I wonder where it was in the late 1930s. We also visited another pretty looking Synagogue very close to the ONS.

That was pretty much the last planned stop on our trip. We walked to the National Museum to take our subway back and came across a gallery of pictures of 1968 Prague.

We had just enough time to head back to the hotel, pick up our stuff and get to the airport. We go there but did the plane take off on time? That’s a whole different story for another post.

Wednesday 3 September 2008

Beautiful Praha - part 1

When people talked about Prague as the most beautiful city in Europe, I thought they were kidding. How can a city compare to the likes of Rome, Venice etc. but I could see what they were talking about once I got there. It is most definitely one of the prettiest cities in Europe if not the prettiest. The different thing about Prague is that even the bad areas aren't really bad. They are still slightly downtrodden old, pretty buildings.

As soon as we made our way into the city, we knew we had our work cut out for us. We had two days and plenty to see. We took a bus from the airport to a nearest tram stop and took the tram to our hotel. It took a total of about 45 minutes from the airport to get to our hotel which was 5 minutes walk from the castle and we even had a castle view from our hotel room [Pic]. The hotel building itself was still owned by the castle authorities and reflects the architecture of the castle.

We put our stuff down, freshened up and after a half hour rest, we were on our way to explore the city. We had a bunch of things to see, the castle, the lesser town, Charles bridge, the old town, the Lennon wall, the dancing building and the Jewish quarter.

We started off taking the tram to Charles bridge and walk over to the old town from there. Charles bridge, constructed about 800 years ago, was the only bridge over the Vlatava river and used to connect the old town to the castle. Its a pedestrian bridge with painters and different vendors trying to ply their trade and of course a ton of tourists :-). Looking up from the bridge, the castle on top of a hill makes for quite an imposing sight.


Anyway, walking over the charles bridge we made our way to the old town center. We spent the afternoon just walking through streets after streets of pretty buildings, canal-ed streets looking like venice, nice cafe's and designer shops etc. The atmosphere, although extremely touristy, seems very chilled out and relaxed. Storekeepers paying the right amount of attention, broad smiles all around and people eager to help. English isn't spoken very widely though and we did struggle to communicate with the locals. Well, I even got offered some dope , well the guy was speaking Czech so I guess I don't really know. He should really get some classes on identifying his target customers right.

While in the old town, we caught a street stage show being put on by cultural groups from the various countries. The Italians kept their show lively and us captivated and dancing whereas the polish dancers bored us enough for us to be attracted by other lures and we walked on.

The Old Town was the original place of settlement of Prague. In its north is the Jewish quarter, south is the crazy quarter with slightly more downtrodden buildings. To its west is the river and the castle and to its east... well more of Prague I guess. The old town square has been the heart of the old town for about a 1000 years now. It houses the very gothic Tyn Cathedral and the Astronomical clock. It's about 700 years old and still running :-) and the swiss thought they made good watches.


We got on to the trams and the busses after that to take a tour of the rest of the city. The outskirts and the places not usually frequented by the tourists. Again, the city impressed. As I was saying earlier, there aren't any bad parts to prague, well none that we could see anyway. After dark, we came back to the old town to take a look at the town and the castle at night and the sigh was just mesmerizing. It took the word picturesque to a whole new level.


Grabbing some dinner in the form of a pizza slice and a falafel sandwich, we turned in for the night. Well ,I hadn't slept the night before and Anusha hadn't had more than a 4 hours of sleep so we both were pretty knocked out for the night.