The views from here are so beautiful that susceptible romantics have been known to spontaneously kiss passers-by, including the monks from Strahov monastery. In spring the views are at their best, as the orchards are in bloom.
Far enough from the centre to be largely tourist-free, Vyšehrad is the perfect place to be alone with your thoughts. Sights include the Neo-Gothic Sts Peter and Paul Church, the graves of Dvořák and Smetana and reconstructed fortifications. However, visitors should be aware that there’s very little shelter from inclement weather.
Albrecht von Wallenstein razed two dozen houses to make way for his expansive “backyard”, which features a man-made lake. Among the garden’s stranger elements is the grotto on the south wall, with stalactites imitating a limestone cave. The cries you hear all around you are the resident peacocks.
Malá Strana residents love to sunbathe, sip wine and play frisbee on the island green of the Little Quarter in summer. However, they also like to smoke marijuana, beat drums well into the night and use the grass for a public dog toilet, so watch your step.
Arguably the most beautiful in Prague. This Baroque-style garden, with balustraded terraces, is located right behind Vrtba Palace, on the slopes of Petřín Hill.
King Přemysl Ottokar II established the royal hunting park here in 1266. A public garden since 1804, Stromovka is one of the city’s largest parks. It has four ponds that are ideal for ice-skating in winter and duck-feeding in summer, and meandering paths that offer easy strolling.
Stop here after pounding the pavements of Wenceslas Square and join the pensioners and office workers at lunch, quietly filling the benches behind the Church of Our Lady of the Snows (see Franciscan Garden).
The spectacular views of Malá Strana from Paradise, Hartig and Garden on the Ramparts (see Prague Castle) won’t fail to inspire. This really is the best way to conclude a day of sightseeing in Hradčany.
This historic complex of beautiful interconnected terrace gardens is situated on the southern slopes of the Prague Castle in Malá Strana. The gardens abound in rich architectural decoration, decorative staircases, balustrades, scenic terraces, garden-houses and pavilions.
These formal gardens were laid out on the orders of the Habsburg king Ferdinand I in 1534 (see Prague Castle). After mulling over Queen Anne’s summer palace and the Communist-revised frescoes in the Ball Game Hall, slip down to the Stag Moat.
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