SLEEPING WITH PEPA ON TRAMS


Destinations > Europe > Czech Republic > Prague > Travel Blog: A journey to GREECE and C ... > SLEEPING WITH PEPA ON TRAMS


modernoddyseus
about Modernoddyseus

TravelPod Badges
modernoddyseus is a Founding Member

Send a message
Subscribe to this Travel Blog Get email updates
Unsubscribe Unsubscribe
Print Entire Travel Blog Print travel blog
Bookmark this page Bookmark
Modernoddyseus's TravelStream™

Create a FREE Travel Blog - Join TravelPod!


Modernoddyseus's travel blogs:

About This Travel Blog
Entries (44)
Guestbook (1)
 



A journey to GREECE and CZECH REPUBLIC to study life, people, and happiness.

Table of contents

13 votes rate it
Visitors: 31778 - 78 this month


This is a featured travel blog! This is a top pick!
Boundary Waters Canoe Area, United States Prague, Czech Republic Rymarov, Czech Republic Rymarov, Czech Republic Rymarov, Czech Republic Olomouc, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Krnov, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Pietrowice, Poland Rýmarov, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Rýmarov, Czech Republic Krnov, Czech Republic Cerveno Horske-Sedlo, Czech Republic Rymarov, Czech Republic Florence, Italy Sempion, Switzerland Lausanne, Switzerland Puysdorf, Austria Rýmarov, Czech Republic Frenstat, Czech Republic
Hide lines Show trip route Reference map 
AN INTERN FOR EPI? - Previous Entry
FROM VISITING THE CZECH ... - Next Entry

SLEEPING WITH PEPA ON TRAMS

,
Flag of Czech Republic
Sunday, Oct 02, 2005

Entry 6 of 44 | show all | print this entry
View all photos & videos  View as slideshow


a wall in
Prague
a wall in Prague

Austria
Austria

Matthias
Matthias

Show all 6 thumbnails

I stood newly on the mainland of Italy, held up my hitchhiking sign, and got a ride from the second vehicle off the ferry.

It was at approximately this time when I realized I really wanted to be in Greece.

I had just wussed out on my plan to get to know Greece, for the second time this year. But, all it took was two minutes of fun hitchhiking to rekindle my wolf's sense of freedom, and confidence in my dream-chasing. I realized I could've been hitchhiking the pea-green Greek countryside now, camping out and meeting people and eating bucket-fuls of olives and searching for work on the way.

But, it was too late for that. Forty-six-year-old Rocco was already driving me up the southern Italian coast. If every day were like this for everyone, we'd all feel too good to wuss out on anything. The sky was blue, the sea was bluer, and Rocco's hair was so blue it was gray.

Rocco spoke only Italian and spoke it to me with family friendliness and humor. When I asked him if his "madre" (mom) was a good cook, he only raised his eyebrows at me happily and patted his round belly. He'd once been to the United States, where he'd fallen head-over-heels in love with "polo fito" (fried chicken). He asked if I knew how to make it. When I said I was going to see my friend in Prague who's a great cook, he joked that if she could make him "polo fito" he'd take us in his small cargo truck all the way there. "Polo fito ... polo fito!"

A second friendly forty-five-year-old trucker, Pietro, gave me a ride next. We passed odd, two-story wooden structures which stood just off-shore in the sea. They looked like the early stages of construction on what were going to be the types of houses that tip over in the wind. But, Pietro said they were fishing devices unique to the central Italian coast. Maybe my grandpa in Michigan should try making some?

And then Julio and Simontina picked me up. They were a good-looking, mid-thirties couple who'd left the kids with grandma and were going to Bologna to see a rock concert. Simontina was very excited about what I was doing. She kept turning around to face me as she rabbitly shot questions about my life. My Spanish-spoken-with-an-Italian-accent had picked up a lot of local words this day, and I was pleasantly surprised that I could converse halfway decently here.

"Grazie." I left them in Ravenna, a town off the expressway on a small road. Ghostly spheres of light surrounded the lamps of the central plaza this evening. A sensible, briefcase-brown building the length of a carnival train boomed for four stories above the plaza. I walked away, to the orange but grassy walls of a massive ancient fortress, and camped.

-- Interjection! I'm sorry, but I have to mention this some time.

-- Some of you people are familiar with my last trip to Europe, which ended in May 2005. It ended because I wanted to go home to see an Italian-blooded American ex-girlfriend.

-- The girl and I didn't get back together. If I learned something from this, it's that loving someone shouldn't be about getting that person to also love you. You should instead hope for and help that person to be as happy as he or she can be - with or without you. And there's a sort of peace that comes with that.

-- Of course ... I now feel we'd be healthier if our love for others was equally dispersed and not centralized. But, back to the story. --

The next day, German Matthias took me in his semi-truck into Austria.

The high, green hills of the Alps pushed up, up to that point where the sky said, "All right, already! You're gonna have to stop there."

Full sheep grazed, giant conifers bulged like plump sausages, clear rivers washed dawdling paths to lower ground, and cloud ribbons zigged out from a spying bluff across the blue. The purple, yellow, red, or chocolate, square, Alpine homes were - like the sheep and spruce trees - bigger than one would've expected.

I nearly went to a rave party that night with three young boys who picked me up. The driver had bleach-blond, gelled hair and bright, new clothes. He swore a lot, "Sheisa!" sped like a devil, and loved drugs. After we couldn't find the rave for an hour, I asked to get out near a field so I could save party-entrance money and just go sleep. "This is crazy," said one boy about my camping. I'd thought they were the crazy ones.

It was my sleeping situation the following night which was crazy. Me and Pepa and our backpacks slept on trams of the Prague city transportation system. When each tram reached its final stop, the conductor yelled at us to wake up, and we had to get off and walk across the street and board another tram without paying.

Pepa was a big, young guy with eyes that wobbled in and out of focus behind dark-rimmed glasses, a silly face, and brown hair that stuck up because it hadn't been combed. Pepa lived in Prague, and not only was he not homeless but he was an engineer for Siemens. I guess he just liked sleeping on trams.

We'd gone out to a bar in the dark city whose old buildings looked like they wanted to stomp us out of spite. We were supposed to sleep at Karel's place. But, once we finished drinking, Karel stumbled away and disappeared.

I had been on a train to Prague when I noticed Karel hodling two plastic cup-fulls of beer and laughing in a way that suggested there were several empty plastic cups nearby. After a long day of unsuccessful hitchhiking, I craved those beers. I ran while the train was stopped to a bar and ordered myself a "pivo." Karel and Pepa and Gabina, the deer-faced long-Prague-purple-haired girl who Karel was hitting on, and I became friends for the rest of the train ride. They never understood anything I said, and the only Czech I understood was "Curva!" (which means, "Sheisa!")

The night ended when I told Pepa I refused to get on the tram again. He ran to get on, and I slept in my sleeping bag under a bush.

Ahh, Prague. The next morning, I walked around.

What a city!: full of huge, long, five-story buildings and their windows. Buildings were the yellows and purples and greens of cookie frosting. The most impressive thing was that the streets sounded more like a forest than a city of two million. There were few cars, and it felt peaceful.

There were tall, glazed-brown watch-towers with golden angel statues. The St. Charles pedestrian bridge ambled over some named river, and it was packed with kingly and saintly and dragonly statues you could ponder with for hours. A monument to 15th century King Vasel and his horse stood valiantly in a vast central square surrounded by golden-spired hotels with golden statues atop. I taste-tested a Czech pastry shop. The city was very touristy.

I caught a bus the rest of the way to my good friend, Klara Sigmundova. She lived in Rymarov in Moravia, Czech Republic, population 10,000. It was September 12th, and I couldn't wait to get to Rymarov!


peace, Modern Oddyseus

Thanks to Rocco; Pietro; Julio & Simontina; Brian; Anna & Nina; Matthias; Johannes, Fabian, & Mark; Christjan; Hanz, Adreanna, & "Iogi"; Dascha & Lucy; George; and Karel for the rides!


Latest Comments (0)

be the first to post a comment

If you like this entry, search for other entries by modernoddyseus, from Czech Republic or try a new search.
AN INTERN FOR EPI?
Go to top of page
FROM VISITING THE CZECH ...

 
Table of Contents
1 - 20 | 21 - 40 | 41 - 44
Previous | SNOWBOARDING WITH THE DEVILshow all entries

1.ELIMINATE THE OIKOYENEIA - Xania, Greece Sep 14, 2005 ( Comments 5 )
2.BUT, WHAT ABOUT THE SUMMER? - Boundary Waters Canoe Area, United States Sep 16, 2005
3.MY INDIVIDUAL DREAMS - Xania, Greece Sep 18, 2005
4.SQUATTING WITH ANARCHISTS - Xania, Greece Sep 20, 2005 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
5.AN INTERN FOR EPI? - Xania, Greece Sep 22, 2005 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 )
6.SLEEPING WITH PEPA ON TRAMS - Prague, Czech Republic Oct 02, 2005 ( This entry has 6 photos 6 )
7.FROM VISITING THE CZECH ... - Rymarov, Czech Republic Oct 06, 2005 ( This entry has 6 photos 6 )
8.... TO TEACHING IN THE CZECH - Rymarov, Czech Republic Oct 09, 2005 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
9.TALL CZECH BEERS AND WOMEN - Rymarov, Czech Republic Oct 16, 2005 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 ) ( Comments 3 )
10.SUNLIGHT, SILENCE, AND SINCERITY - Olomouc, Czech Republic Oct 25, 2005 ( This entry has 7 photos 7 )
11.MAKE A STORY IN CLASS - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Nov 03, 2005 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
12.KRNOV JE RAJ - Krnov, Czech Republic Nov 10, 2005 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
13.WALTZ, JIVE, AND THE CHA-CHA-CHA - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Nov 19, 2005 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 )
14.THESE ARE THE MONTHS OF THE YEAR ... - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Nov 25, 2005 ( This entry has 6 photos 6 ) ( Comments 3 )
15.THE TOTALLY UNEXCITING STORY ABOUT POLAND - Pietrowice, Poland Dec 05, 2005 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 ) ( Comments 1 )
16.ST. MIKOLAS'S DAY - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Dec 12, 2005 ( This entry has 2 photos 2 )
17.WHAT I DID ON WEDNESDAY - PART I - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Dec 19, 2005 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
18.WEDNESDAY - PART II - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Dec 20, 2005 ( This entry has 1 photos 1 )
19.POSITIVES AND NEGATIVES OF TEACHING ENGLISH - Rýmarov, Czech Republic Jan 02, 2006 ( This entry has 4 photos 4 )
20.KOLINOVSKÝ CHRISTMAS - Krnov, Czech Republic Jan 03, 2006 ( This entry has 5 photos 5 )

Previous | SNOWBOARDING WITH THE DEVILshow all entries
1 - 20 | 21 - 40 | 41 - 44

Back to Entry - Back to Home






Explore Prague, Czech Republic
Hotels in Prague
Moevenpick Hotel Prague
Clarion Congress Hotel Prague
Holiday Inn Congress Center Prague
Dorint Novotel Praha Don Giovanni Prague
Hilton Prague Old Town
Marriott Prague
Duo Prague
Hilton Prague
Ibis Praha Old Town Prague
Top Hotel Praha Prague
Travel Blogs
Hah Praha by sojanet
Czech This Out by mallorybecker
The last stopover by bogna
Breathtaking Prague by vine_hooligans
Prague by timrie
Forum Discussions
Hello from Canada by terri009
12 of the Best Free European Attractions by mmbcross
Welcome to Prague, the City of Hundred by mimiama
Vegan travel by starlagurl
Hello from Korea (by way of California by stereobread
Photos and Videos
23 - Cirque Terre 42
06-More Castle Early morning in Prague's Jewish Cemetry
At a castle in czech republic Cesky Krumlov River View

 

Prague Hotels (582)
Prague Travel Blogs (1,378)
Czech Republic Travel Blogs (1,566)
Prague Forum Discussions (5,000)
Czech Republic Forum Discussions (5,000)
Prague Photos and Videos (15,664)
Czech Republic Photos (5,000)

 



Africa | Asia | Australasia | Europe | Middle East | North America | South America | Central America | Caribbean
Home | Toolbar | Store | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | About | FAQ | Jobs | Contact Us
Copyright © 1997 - 2009 TravelPod.com, a proud founder of travel blogs on the web. All Rights Reserved.