Re: 1921 Poll 2.0
Posted: Wed May 25, 2022 3:20 pm
today, reading the local crime reports gives me again a flashback of the past "incident" (described above)...
carrying once on my shoulder nearly two meters long plants while encountering the cops, i can perfectly understand what the guy felt and what the cops (most likely) thought...when we were already a few steps behind their backs, they finally started to sniff some crime and called at us, "hey boys, wait a minute!"
i was still convinced they have no clue i carry on my shoulder two big plants of marijuana.
my first thought was they suspect me of committing some act of vandalism in the nearby castle garden (later to become unesco heritage site).
so, i shouted back (without stopping to walk), "it's okay, it's just a weed."
i mean, i said in Czech "plevel" which means "weed" but the Czech word "plevel" is not synonymous of marijuana (as in Egnlish) — i was not that stupid to tell them it is THE "weed".
i was convinced i am calming them down by assuring them i didn't rip off any valuable plants in the castle garden.
An unusual transport of wood was on display in Edvard Beneš Street in Pilsen.
The cyclist was transporting a five-meter long trunk
He planned to make the bed
A rather incredible spectacle faced the municipal police in Pilsen on Tuesday morning.
In Edvard Beneš Street, the Bory district, a cyclist was riding on the sidewalk, pulling behind a spruce trunk about five meters long.
He tied it to the bike's carrier and provided it with wheels at the back.
"The patrol stopped the man and found out that it was a felled wood that lay in Borský Park," said Jana Puzmanova, a spokeswoman for the Pilsen municipal police. Thus indicating it was a stolen wood.
"He wanted to use the trunk to make the bed," she added.
"People usually don't steal felled trees in Pilsen's parks," Petr Kutak, who is in charge of caring for trees at the municipal department of urban greenery, told the press.
"We have certainly never encountered such a bizarre mode of transportation," he added.
According to him, the man took a piece of wood that lay in the park.
At first, he probably had to cut branches on it.
"The officers fined the man on the spot," Puzmanová said.
"However, he is still obliged to come to the municipality and pay moreover the price of wood," Kutak added.