This is Prague from the Charles Bridge. This bridge, lined with statues of saints, was originally built in 1357.
I've come to accept and love this season in Eastern Europe for it's plethora of overcast and gray days. If you can ignore all the North Face jackets and digital cameras, you can almost feel like you were there five hundred years ago.
When I visit these cities, it's so hard to come to terms with the fact that people actually live in them and aren't just there to visit.
We must have looked like a group of famous people with all the big cameras.
Easter-egg looking houses on one of the main strips.
The architecture and design in this city was incredible - here is a door to a church.
And of course, a great backdrop for a photo shoot!
This was after we left the Museum of Contemporary Art, which was... very phallic.
Prague is probably the most ornate city I've seen.
Yet another awesome church door!
There really isn't even a need for cars in Prague, I think only a very small amount of people actually own them.
And then it was time to eat again! We went to a place called Svejk, which is a small tavern that pays homage to a hero, named Svejk, from a novel by Czech author Jaroslav Hasek.
Onion soup.
Chubby wieners and pickled vegetables.
Schnitzel!
At night we went to the Old Town Hall, which has been witness to the executions of Wenceslas in 929 and the Hussite chiefs in 1621.
The Old Town Hall also has the astronomical clock, which parades small statues of the 12 apostles on the hour every hour. However, it is really just an anticlimactic glorified coo-coo clock, so I wouldn't recommend waiting around for it.
We spent some time at the Christmas Market, and then went back to the hostel to bed. Not! Then we went out, but my camera did not join us...