Prague Without The Trains or the Cameraphone
This is an album for those of you exasperated with the number of train, tram, and general rail photos I have. :-) This is the "quality" Prague album, at least to people who hate trains. :-)
Narodni Divadlo seen from Strelecky Ostrov, Edited…
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Here's a view of the Narodni Divadlo, or National Theatre of the Czech Republic, seen from Strelecky Ostrov. The bridge next to the Theatre is the Most Legii, which crosses Strelecky Ostrov and is the primary way to access the island. I have many other photos on iPernity of this area.
View of Podoli from Vysehrad, Prague, CZ, 2012
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I've shot photos from this location many times before, but I figured I would give it one more try. I think the reflections in the harbor came out well in this shot. The harbor connects Podoli with the River Vltava, out of the frame to the right, which would be to the West. This view is rougly to the south from the parapet of Vysehrad.
Snail in Vysehrad, Picture 3, Edit LoRes Version,…
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I've seen considerably larger snails than this one, but this is the largest one I've photographed in the wild. I was actually worried that this one would be stepped on, since it was trying to cross one of the paths in Vysehrad, but it wasn't possible to remove it without killing it, so I left it.
Fall Colors, Picture 1, Edited Version, Haje, Prag…
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The lighting on this shot wasn't ideal. I hadn't used my Zeiss-Ikon Contina LK in a few years, and had never used it for Fall colors, so I had a few duds. One problem with bad lighting, too, is that it kills the colors.
Fall Colors, Picture 2, Edited Version, Haje, Prag…
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I had better luck with this shot. Zeiss lenses are great for this sort of subject matter, so that's why I wanted to try it.
Fall Colors, Picture 8, Edited Version, Haje, Prag…
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Sidliste projects can be ugly, or not. It can depend a lot on angles and perception.
Fall Colors, Picture 11, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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This was more or less an accidental find. I wasn't expecting a bush to be this striking.
Fall Colors, Picture 12, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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This is an alternate to Picture 11. I think I still like 11 better, but I decided to post this anyway.
Fall Colors, Picture 15, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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I don't know a lot about this building, other than that it's a school. I don't know if it's a new build or a rebuild of an older Communist-era building. A lot of the Communist-era buildings in the Sidliste projects have been renovated and repainted to look new.
Fall Colors, Picture 16, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
Fall Colors, Picture 17, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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Some of the newer buildings in the Sidliste projects are conventional houses, even if they're multi-unit. These are some of the houses on the Southern outer edge of Haje, before you get into Milichovsky les.
Fall Colors, Picture 19, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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This is on the border with Milichovsky les. The fence on the right is actually for a pasture, behind which is Milichovsky les.
Fall Colors, Picture 22, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
Fall Colors, Picture 25, Edited Version, Haje, Pra…
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This is technically within Prague, but is outside the sphere of development. The road I took this from essentially looks like it's out in the countryside.
MiG-17 Fighters at Letecké muzeum Kbely, Edited ve…
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I had meant to visit the aviation museum at Kbely airport for many years, and in 2014 I finally got around to it. The photos I'm posting today barely scratch the surface of what I found there, as I took pictures of almost every public exhibit with my cameraphone. However, these are examples of what I took with my Zeiss-Ikon Contina LK, loaded with Kodak Tmax 400. These two fighters are the first in the series, being both Soviet-built MiG-17 jet fighters. They look different because the one on the right has radar, with the distinct bulge in the intake (a very imaginative design), and appears to be two-seat, hence the longer canopy. These were some of the earliest jet fighters used by the Czechslovak air force, other than some Messerschmidt Me-262's built at the end of World War II, some of them by Avia. The Czechoslovak air force also had MiG-15 fighters, but older pilots have told me they were only used as trainers. Of course, the Czechs also built the Aero Delphin, which as an entirely Czech design, and the museum has at least one. However, the Delphin was only a trainer.
Ilyushin Il-14 at Letecké muzeum Kbely, Edited ver…
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This Ilyushin Il-14 airliner appears to be ex-air force, but Ceskoslovenske Aerolinie (Czech Airlines, or CSA), were the primary users in Czechoslovakia. The Il-14 was one of a series of improved DC-3 and DC-4 copies developed in Russia during the 1950's, and many survived into the 1980's. Today, while they no longer work for Aeroflot or CSA, they are used by smaller airlines and charter services, especially in Africa, as they can land safely on dirt runways. This applies mostly to 4-engine Il-18's, though, rather than 2-engine Il-14's (the Il-18 was more than simply a DC-4 copy, however, and was by far the most advanced of the series).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilyushin_Il-12
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilyushin_Il-14
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilyushin_Il-18
This is not unlike the fate of the surviving Douglas DC-3's. As historians will note, Ilyushin were not the first Soviet design bureau to copy the DC-3, as the Lisunov Li-2 was an even closer copy produced during World War II. The Kbely museum actually has one that they keep in one of their hangars with other World War II aircraft.
Tupolev Tu-104 at Letecké muzeum Kbely, Picture 2,…
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The textbook trivia answer as to the first jet airliner, is obviously the DeHavilland D.H. 106 Comet, introduced in 1952 after a 3-year testing period. However, it was initially a disaster, quite literally, as four crashed fatally in only the first two years of operation. Later variants fared better (after the initial losses were traced to a badly-designed fuselage that couldn't deal with both pressurization and high subsonic flight), although in total 26 of 114 Comets were lost, a rate of 22.8%. The second ever jet airliner to be introduced was the Tupolev Tu-104, seen here, and it fared far better. Introduced in 1956, 204 were built, and 32 lost to crashes (37 were lost in total, as 5 were destroyed by terrorists), a loss rate of 15%, if you exclude terrorist attacks. In addition, many Tu-104 crashes were non-fatal, to the point were over a third of passengers survived on average. A particularly notable incident was the first one, in 1958, where the pilot successfully landed with no engines (they had run out of fuel) albeit short of the runway. The reason this Tu-104 is displayed at Kbely, though, has nothing to do with any accident. Instead, it is significant to Czech aviation history because CSA were the only export customer for the Tu-104, thus making them only the third airline in the world (after BOAC and Aeroflot) to operate jet airliners. Another surviving CSA Tu-104 can be seen in a park in Olomouc, where it has been converted to "The Aeroplane Bar."
East End of Letenske Sady, Edited version, Prague,…
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Letenske Sady, also sometimes generally referred to as "Letna," which is only part true, spans a 1.5 kilometre stretch of parkland between the corner of Skalecka and Frantizka Krizka streets roughly seen here facing the other direction (west), and Chokovy Sady, another portion of parkland to the west. It is thus a constituent part of a larger stretch of parkland that reaches as far west as Kajetanka, 4.3 kilometres away.
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