Putim |
By May 31 I was nearing the end of the Budějovicka anabase. The walking had taken it's toll. When getting up from chairs people looked at me, wondering how such a relatively fit looking man moved round like a geriatric. In the mornings I rolled out of bed like a log, and in the evening my feet were swollen and and chubby like those of a toddler.
That morning I took the bus to Protivín to follow my hero to one of his many glorious moments; getting arrested at Putim, suspected of being a Russian spy. On arrival I took a detour to Krč u Protivína and photographed the house where authors mother, Kateřina Hašková was born. This was a place Hašek himself knew well from visits during summer holidays. Thereafter the path led through fields, forests and even past the enormous Talínský rybník, where I watched fish being caught, or rather, harvested. Fish-breeding is industry and South Bohemia is the centre of it all. The word fish-pond is misleading in these parts, many of the rybníky would be classed as lakes elsewhere.
In Putim I immediately went to the municipality to ask about the facts behind Švejk's stay here. It turns out that there was no permanent gendarmerie station at Putim. It only existed during the periods of k.k manoeuvres and it had no fixed location. At house #41 there is a plaque, but this refers to the filming of Karel Steklý's Švejk here in the mid-fifties, and is not based on facts. The village pub was next door at number #42 but Hašek's name Na kocourku was probably invented. The man at the municipality said that the pub at no.42 didn't have a name at all. Today there is one large pub in the village, but in another location. U Cimbury has drawings of Švejk on the wall. Putim has become famous because of Švejk but is worth a visit on it's own right. Idyllically set by a lake and dominated by the Church of Saint Vavřinec. The panorama is well known in the Czech Republic, not least because parts of the film was shot here.
Wall painting from U Cimbury. Švejk being led to Písek |
The final leg of Švejk's anabasis took him from Putim to Písek, escorted by a gendarme. As often happens in Hašek's stories, there was an intermezzo in a pub and Švejk in the end had to escort the gendarme to the Bezirksgendarmeriekommando in Písek. This scene is exploited to the ridiculous in the Steklý film; the policeman is brought to the station in a wheelbarrow. For me these last kilometres were less of a problem. I couldn't resist a stop in a roadside hospoda but still arrived in Písek every bit as steady as Švejk did.
Bezirksgendarmeriekommando in Písek |
This concluded my walking anabasis in the Czech South. I estimated that I had walked around 200 km in these 8 days, and was looking forward to less strenuous exercises, happy to arrive at my Regiment in České Budějovice, the South Bohemian metropolis that all roads lead to.
It was a tough anabasis, but the beer was worth it, I'm sure! (The only questionable thing was the decision to try the Hungarian moonshine ... It sounds as if it could had been supplied to and marketed by the Blue Oyster Cult. :-)
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