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Travel Stripe - October 2008

Amazed in New York

October 25th 2008 02:35
We had expected to be amazed by New York and we were. Most of the time it exceeded our expectations and often it completely overturned them.

Manhattan New York
Manhattan from Brooklyn Heights


Apart from two stopovers in Los Angeles back in the last century, I’d never been to the States. Even from those brief, long distant encounters, I carry memories of grueling queues, heavy security, close, lengthy passport scrutiny, questions, bag searches and peremptory, if not rude personnel. We flew in from Athens to John F. Kennedy Airport a few weeks ago expecting more of the same – much more of the same. That first expectation was soon overturned.


Posters, lining the corridors from the plane to the Immigration Hall, told us that we could expect courtesy and respect from airport personnel and where to go if denied it. Good start! The queues dealt swiftly with 300 or so passengers who disembarked from our Olympic Airlines flight. Only one firm, efficient, but courteous, young African American in a suit directed it. I looked for signs of gun but couldn’t find them. Even though we had filled in the wrong immigration form and had to return to the desk for another, we were soon back at the booth again where we were fingerprinted efficiently, our passports were scrutinized and stamped quickly and we were welcomed to New York warmly. Our bags were already circling the carousel when we arrived in baggage claim. We passed unchallenged through a door marked “Nothing to Declare”


We were carrying with us a set of preconceptions gleaned from the media, veteran friends of the NY experience and our own conjecture, that New York was impersonal, people suspicious and paranoid and that the city’s systems and infrastructure were inefficient. These were soon dispelled too.

Out on U.S. soil in arrivals we were greeted by the cheerful Marie, one of a team, in scout-inspired uniforms, dedicated to helping confused foreigners as they emerge wide-eyed from the other side. A taxi to Times Square, she advised, should cost $45. Should we tip? “Sure, if they’re nice to you” said Marie “But if they’re mean to you ain’t gonna tip now are you?” Er, well we thought we had to “No Sir uh uh, ain’t nobody gonna tip nobody mean” OK well then how much should we tip somebody who’s nice? “Well now that’s up to your own generousity”

Also somewhere in the back of my mind lurked the vague idea, that since 9/11, Middle Eastern people in the US lived in a closely watched demi-monde, with no part in its minstream systems apart from tossing together the odd kebab on a corner stand. I thought too, naively that the typical New York Taxi driver was an old, crusty, gravel-voiced Robert De Niro, Joe Pesche or Archie Bunker type with a fund of NY folk stories. These ideas too went the way of my expectations and misconceptions.

Our taxi driver was called Aziz. His brothers seemed to be driving the taxi in front, the one behind and the one next door. He looked about 18 and was totally silent. Arab music played in the background. “Love this music” I said half to myself. Aziz turned the music up.

Gridlock was a word I had firmly linked to the phrase New York traffic. It was 5pm when we sailed out of JFK and onto the expressway. Peak hour! But truly, the traffic was no worse than, if as bad as the Tulla freeway I decided as we zoomed along with the haunting drums, bells, strings and pipes of Arabia in background and New York’s amazing cityscape unfolding on both sides.

We tipped Aziz generously.

More about New York in Travel Stripe's next post
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Two picturesque Prague streets

October 10th 2008 03:07
With its magnificent castle, its beautiful bridges, its stunning squares, its spectacular public buildings, its imposing towers, its old towns and its vibrant squares, its easy to overlook Pragues quiet little streets. But it's well worth taking the time to wander through them, to discover some of the city’s loveliest houses and some of its most fascinating history.

Nerudova Street

Nerudova Street, Prague
Nerudova Street


Depending on your approach, Nerudova Street curves gently down or winds steeply up the hill below Prague Castle.

It takes its name from Czech poet and journalist Jan Neruda, who immortalized the district in his short stories. He lived here, between 1849 and 1857 first, at number 47, in the house At the Two Suns and later at number 41, at the house At Three Black Eagles where he wrote his first collection of poems.

Although Neruda Street attracts crowds of tourists with its quaint shops, cafes and restaurants, it is most famous for its “house signs”.

Before the introduction of house numbers in 1770, all Prague houses were distinguished by picturesque signs. Today they tell the history of the house and the people who lived in them.

The house At the Three Fiddles at number no. 12 was once the home of three very successful violin-makers who sold their instruments all over Europe. Legend has it that on quiet nights the house echoes with the haunting strains of violins. At number 41 at the house At the Red Lion a red lion holds a golden cup in his paw. Petr Brandl, the famous Czech painter lived here. His work adorns the Church of St Margaret in Prague-Brevnov or the Church of St James. The house At the Golden Lion at number 32 holds the National Museum’s Historical Pharmacies exhibition. At number 6 is the house At the Red Eagle and at number 34, the Golden Horseshoe. The Green Lobster is at number 43 and the White Swan is at number 48.

Steeped in small stories, lined with beautiful little buildings and full of surprises, Nerudova Street is a wonderful wind down from the overwhelming might and splendour of Prague Castle.

Celetna Street

Celetna Street, Prague
Celetna Street


Quaint and vibrant Celetna Street leads from the Old Town Square to the Powder Tower. It was once part of the Royal Route followed by the Czech Kings up to Prague Castle. Its name derives from the traditional plaited bread rolsl which were made in its bakeries for centuries.

Today Celetna Street is a popular tourist spot. Crowds stroll in its shade by day and in its romantic gas light by night. It is lined with souvenir shops, cafes and restaurants.

Still, it is its historic houses, marked by picturesque “house signs” which give Celetna Street its distinctive character and charm. The Sixt House at number 2 and At the Three Kings, at number 3, are both former homes of Prague’s most famous writer, Franz Kafka. Josepha Duskova, Mozart’s mistress once lived at number 8, At the Black Sun, at The Manhart House at number 17 was once a Piarist College but now houses the Theatre in Celetna. The House at the Vulture, at number no. 22, was one of Prague’s early breweries but has been part of Charles University since the 18th century. The house at the Four Columns, at number 25, was the home of the theologist Bernard Bolzano. The Buquoy Palace at no. 20, also now part of the Charles University, is a neo Classical gem. The House at The Black Madonna which was the first cubist building in Europe is the street’s most famous house. It now houses a permanent exhibition of Czech cubism and its Grand Orient Café sells special cubist cakes.

For history buffs, lovers of architecture and romantics a stroll down Celetna Street is a Prague must do.
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If the Old Town Square is the hub and heart of historic, touristic Prague, then Wenceslas Square is the centre of the modern, popular city.

Wenceslas Square, Prague
Looking up Wenceslas Square


It was designed in 1348 by the Emperor Charles IV, as a horse market. More a rectangle than a square in shape, it is 750 meters long and 60 meters wide. In function, it is less of square and more of a boulevard; traffic streams along both sides and trams cut across the centre. It is lined with shops, hotels, casinos, restaurants, discos, offices and food stands. Its pavements and central gardens throng with people day and night.

Wenceslas Square, Prague
The magnificent Europe Hotel in Wenceslas Square


At the top end of Wenceslas Square the golden cupola of the National Museum dominates the skyline. From just below the grand old building, St Wenceslas, the legendary father of the Czech nation, surveys the scene through unblinking stone eyes. The Wenceslas statue “at the horse’s tail” is one of the popular meeting places for the people of Prague.

Wenceslas Square, Prague
The statue of St Wenceslas from the steps of the National Museum


Just below the Wenceslas statue, a small round flowerbed with a modest memorial remembers the “victims of communism. Nearby a small bronze cross marks the place where 20 year ole philosophy student Jan Palach set fire to himself on January 16, 1969, in protest against the Soviet invasion. One million people attended his funeral which turned into a major demonstration against the communist regime.

Since the death of Jan Palach, Wenceslas Square has become a national symbol and the traditional centre for demonstrations and protests.
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