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Carp Time Is Here

December 22, 2006 By Dana Leave a Comment

Christmas Carp Sold in PragueTubs filled with live carp have been out at many places around Prague since Monday. Carp is the main part of Czech Christmas dinner on December 24 and is usually served with potato salad. The majority of Christmas carp comes from the ponds of Třeboň in Southern Bohemia where it is specially raised.

Some people buy carp live and keep it in the bathtub for a few days to entertain their children. A strange custom, I know.

Mail to Baby Jesus

December 19, 2006 By Dana Leave a Comment

You probably know that if you want to send a letter to Santa Claus, you need to send it to the North Pole. But what about Ježíšek? Do you know how to address your Christmas wish list letter to make sure it reaches Baby Jesus? If not, don’t despair. We have done the research and found out Ježíšek’s address. All children are welcome to ask for the perfect Christmas presents by sending a letter to:

Vánoční pošta
362 62 Boží Dar
Czech Republic

Boží Dar is a town in the Krušné Hory Mountains. It is the highest located town in Central Europe and its name means “God’s Gift”, so it is only natural that Baby Jesus should chose this place to receive his mail. If you would like to send him a last minute letter, make sure it is delivered by December 22.

You can read more about mailing Ježíšek at Ježíškova pošta (in Czech).

Information about Ježíšek and Czech Christmas can be found on our Czech Christmas page.

A Convenient Dry Cleaner with a Catch

December 14, 2006 By Dana 3 Comments

There was a dry cleaning place down the street from us, just a block from where we live. It was not one of those 24-hour services. It could take up to a week to get your stuff back, but the convenient location of the place couldn’t be beat. It was tiny in there, just one room really, and it was run by a nice woman who also did alterations. All in all, a great place to have in your neighborhood.

Except that the woman smoked like a chimney. So you brought a brand new, washed shirt in to have the sleeves shortened. You handed it over, got your slip and watched the shirt being hung on the to-be-worked-on rack. Five days and some hundred cigarettes later you’d get your shirt back with the sleeves just the right length, but smelling of cigarette smoke so bad that you might just as well have been sitting in a smoky pub for six hours straight.

The same would happen to your dry cleaning in case you didn’t pick it up on the day it was ready. Because if you didn’t, your cashmere sweater would also end up hanging in the room where the nice woman sewed away on her little sewing machine, smoking cigarette after cigarette. And when you brought your cashmere sweater home, you’d have to hang it on a door handle, open the windows and let it air out for several days until the smell was gone and the sweater could be worn again.

I was always baffled by this and thought, don’t some people have their clothes dry cleaned BECAUSE they smell of cigarette smoke after a night out on the town? Anyway, it no longer matters because the place closed a few days ago. I guess there weren’t enough people who were willing to keep a local smoky dry cleaner in business.

Městem chodí Mikuláš or St. Nicholas Night in Prague

December 5, 2006 By Dana Leave a Comment

St. Nicholas Tradition in PragueDecember 5th is when Czechs celebrate the old tradition of St. Nicholas (Mikuláš). Last year, Jeff and I went to the Old Town Square in the evening and we were surprised to see so much action. Groups consisting of St. Nicholas, the Angel and the Devil (some wearing very impressive costumes) walked around the square, stopping to talk to little children who were there with their parents. The children, awe in their eyes, obediently sang songs and recited shy poems in exchange for sweets and praise. Foreign tourists with curious smiles on their faces and cameras in hand obviously enjoyed being in the midst of this peculiar Czech pre-Christmas tradition. It was all cute and a lot more fun than I had anticipated.

In case you don’t know what the Mikuláš tradition is about, we write about it on My Czech Republic.

Happy Mikuláš!

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