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Czech Birth Rate One of the Lowest in the World

October 12, 2005 By Dana 1 Comment

Based on the State of World Population 2005 report, which was released today by the United Nations Population Fund, the Czech Republic has one of the lowest birth rates in the world, specifically 1.19 children per woman. It shares the same statistic with Slovakia. The only two countries with an even lower birth rate are Ukraine and Hong Kong. In the latter case, birth rate is regulated by the state. The average birth rate in Europe is 1.42.

Czech women wait longer to have kids these days – often into their early to mid-30s – and lots of them end up having only one child. Why? Career, financial reasons and a desire for independence seem to be the main factors.

Czech women place more importance on their careers than they did in the past. They often choose to postpone the committment of having kids in favor of their jobs. The fact that women with children tend to be disadvantaged by their employees only contributes to this trend. Young Czechs are also presented with a lot more opportunities than was the norm some 10 – 15 years ago and many of them spend their 20s working abroad or studying.

Young Czech couples often wait on starting a family until they can afford to raise a child. Salary levels in the Czech Republic have been increasing at a slower rate than the cost of living, and the amount of financial support that the Czech government provides to women on maternity leave is low. It depends on the woman’s salary and the amount of her monthly health insurance payments. The maximum amount of government support is 419 CZK/14 EUR per day, but many Czech women only qualify for half of this amount or less.

Thank You for Shopping with Us

October 9, 2005 By Dana 4 Comments

So it’s official. According to a research done by the Czech daily MF DNES, over one third of grocery stores in the Czech Republic sell bad or expired food. Items are either left on the shelves past the expiration date, or, in worse cases, repackaged with a “new” expiration date printed on them. (iDNES article – in Czech)

A manager of the Julius Meinl meat department in České Budějovice is facing two years in jail for having ordered her staff to rinse expired meat. Employees were instructed to rinse bad meat products in a mixture of water and vinegar to remove any smell, and to cut off bad parts. The meat was then sold to customers. (iDNES article – in Czech)

I’m unfortunately used to seeing expired food on the shelves. It seems to be quite normal at some small grocery stores in my neighborhood where expired butter, chocolate or packaged ham aren’t hard to find. Since moving back to the Czech Republic a year ago, I’ve learned to check the expiration date of each and every product I put into my basket. It makes shopping take longer, but I’d rather spend the extra time to not have to throw away the contents of my bag after coming home. Not that it’s never happened and not that checking expiration dates always does the trick.

A few months ago, Jeff and I made a decent size shopping at the Delvita on Karlovo náměstí. We wanted to stock up on meat (we had bought meat there previously and were happy with it), so we bought two packages of pork tenderloin (panenka, the most expensive cut) and a package of chicken breasts, all marked with a future expiration date. When we got home and opened one of the packages of pork to cook it for dinner, we were greeted with a horrible smell that didn’t go away even after we let the meat “breathe”, refusing to believe that “our Delvita” actually sold us bad meat. We checked the other package and it was the same. To our astonishment, the chicken was bad as well. We threw out all the meat and were left with no dinner. But wait, that’s not all. I remember throwing out another item from that day’s shopping. Was it moldy bread? Maybe. Anyway, the Delvita on Karlovo náměstí is not “our Delvita” anymore.

Another similar experience was recently provided by the Carrefour Eden in Prague 10. We shop there regularly. Among other things, we used to buy fresh fish there because we can’t find it anywhere else within a reasonable radius from our home. Around 7 p.m. on September 6, we bought our usual salmon fillets and we also splurged and got two cod fillets. Not the cheap cod. We got the more expensive kind. You can imagine our surprise when we unwrapped the fish around noon the next day, looking forward to making our favorite baked cod, and, yet again, our noses were hit with a sickening smell. So, after striking Delvita on Karlovo náměstí from our list, we also no longer buy fresh fish at Carrefour Eden, or do so rarely and with a sense of taking a chance. The fact that one of the fish counter employees routinely uses his teeth to open the plastic bag before wrapping your fish in it isn’t exactly appealing either.

I’m not even going to elaborate on Carrefour’s fruit and vegetable section where one can happily select from rotten apples and grapes and tired-looking tomatoes. Sometimes I stand in front of the displays of rotten fruit and quietly wonder if it is for real or if the store is trying to play a joke on us. But no one ever laughs.

Seven Wonders of the Czech Republic

October 2, 2005 By Dana Leave a Comment

One of the largest Czech dailies Mladá fronta DNES and its online version iDNES ran a public poll over the summer in which their readers were asked to choose seven wonders of the Czech Republic. There were 30 candidates and two were voted out each week. The poll ran for 11 weeks.

Once the seven sites were selected, the poll was extended by another two weeks during which time readers were asked to choose the one site they considered to be the top wonder of the Czech Republic.

The seven wonders of the Czech Republic, as selected by the readers of MF DNES and iDNES, are:

1. Dlouhé Stráně Power Plant in the Jeseníky Mountains, Northern Moravia
2. Ještěd Transmitter Tower on Mount Ještěd in Liberec, Northern Bohemia
3. Prague Castle
4. Historical Center of Český Krumlov
5. Charles Bridge in Prague
6. Karlštejn Castle
7. Hluboká nad Vltavou Chateau

The other candidates that didn’t make the list are:
Baťa’s Zlín, Ervěnice Corridor, the historical center of Telč, Pernštejn Castle, Cathedral of St. Barbara in Kutná Hora, Temelín nuclear power plant, the Lednice-Valtice area, Holašovice, Terezín Fortress, military fortifications along the border, Zelená hora pilgrimage church, pond Rožmberk, Sazka Arena in Prague, Schwarzenberg Canal, Podolsko Bridge, Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc, Strahov Stadium in Prague, Dancing House in Prague, Vila Tugendhat in Brno, Vítkovice industrial complex, the system of dams on the Vltava, Kroměříž Chateau and Gardens, Litomyšl Chateau
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