Interesting things
- Would you like to visit a fictive hotel and just to image you are beeing there?
- Do you like travelling? I love... There is some few information abou beautiful historical town Olomouc in Czech republic... So see Tourist Guide Olomouc.

- Christmas In Czech republic
Centuries ago, the western half of Czechoslovakia was known as Bohemia. This was the 10th century home of Good King Wenceslaus, the main character in the familiar English Christmas carol. It is said that English troops, fighting in Bohemia hundreds of years later, brought the song home with them.
In Czech republic, St. Nicholas is called Svaty Mikalas and is believed to climb to earth down from heaven on a golden rope along with his companions: an angel and a whip-carrying devil.
An ancient tradition shared by Czech republic and Poland involves cutting a branch from a cherry tree putting it in water indoors to bloom. If the bloom opens in time for Christmas it is considered good luck, and also a sign that the winter may be short. The hope of early spring helps keep spirits up during the long dark winter.
Something about the Labor Day Cookout
Labor Day has become the second biggest cookout event of the year in the United States. However as more and more people turn to year round grilling it isn't time to pack away the grill. If you live in the northern climates this may be your last chance to throw one last backyard cookout before darker evenings and colder nights send your guests indoors. Tradition dictates good food on a summer holiday and being that last holiday of the summer you had better make it good whether you plan on a clambake of a good old fashioned barbecue. And if you are planning a backyard cookout then this is the place for you. Now I think that you should take advantage of Labor Day to celebrate summer so mix up some summer time drinks light up the grill or smoker and have a great cookout.
- If you would like to know something about Indian summer:
Indian summer is a name given to a period of sunny, warm weather just before winter. This time is often in late October or early November (Northern hemisphere) / late April or early May (Southern hemisphere), sometime after the first frost. It can persist for just a few days or sometimes over a week. The dates above are very broad due to the obviously enormous variations in climatic patterns throughout each hemisphere. In the northern U.S. state of Minnesota, for example, warm Indian summer weather generally occurs earlier: in early or mid-October rather than in early November. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, where some of the warmest weather of the year very often occurs in October anyway and the winter and summer temperature ranges vary relatively little, the term "Indian summer," if used at all, does not have the same potency as it would in a region with hot summers and very cold winters. The term is also used metaphorically to refer to anything that blooms late, or unexpectedly, or after is has been assumed to be no longer interesting or relevant. For example: "The team experienced an Indian summer, winning the series after losing the first six games". Compare this usage to renaissance. The term has been used for well over two centuries and its origins have been lost. There are several theories as to its etymology: It may be so named because this was the traditional period where North American First Nations/Native American peoples would harvest their fall crops. In The Americans, The Colonial Experience, Daniel J. Boorstin speculates that the term originated from raids on European colonies by Indian war parties; these raids usually ended in autumn, hence the extension to summer-like weather was an "Indian" summer. This is unlikely, as the first recorded instance of the term happened in 1778, by which time such raids would have become uncommon. It could be so named because the phenomenon was more common in what were then North American Indian territories, as opposed to the Eastern seaboard. It may be of Asian Indian, rather than North American Indian, origin. H. E. Ware, an English writer, noted that ships at that time traversing the Indian Ocean loaded up their cargo the most during the "Indian Summer", or fair weather season. Several ships actually had an "I.S." on their hull at the load level thought safe during the Indian Summer.
That's me
Something about me- My name is Jana Urbanova
- for a year and half I live in Napajedla near Zlin
- I'm 20 years old, but I don't want to be older... ;]
- I study at Tomas Bata University at FaME
- I have a lot of hobbies, but I don't have enought time to do all of them. Most I like sport activities
- Sometimes I attend to photo modelling
- I love riding on motorcycle with my boyfriend
- If you would like to see my presentation about Napajedla, you will just click. The wider version in Microsoft Word you will find here.