Off to Prague at the end of the month with 18 mates, I was wondering if bars off the beaten%26quot; track are receptive to large groups. I hear a lot of the bars in the main squares are very commercialised and we would like to try out some Czech bars early in the evening.
Can anyone help or suggest a few bars/pubs. Also how do Czech Girls/Lads react to groups of English?
Cheers
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Davman
a group of three of us went over last year to Prague and while I%26#39;m not sure of the reception for stag groups in the more local bars I can tell you the locals dont like English blokes going over there and being rowdy in a way that might be fine in a British pub.
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you%26#39;re much better sticking to the centre (where the pubs now generally accept groups - they didnt used to, but they found the policy cost too much money). Remember Czechs are quite quiet people and if you walk into a real Czech pub, it will be people quietly sitting down with a beer talking to eachother.
If you want a real Czech pub in the centre, try, U Medicku on Na Perstyne street near Tesco and about 2 minutes walk from that U Zlateho Tygra on Husova street. Both packed full of locals rather than tourists so you will be able to experience the real thing.
10 or 15 years ago, Czech women went gaga for one night stands with foreigners. Generally, not so now, unless you want to pay for it
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Cheers Peb7, I only meant are we going to expect trouble in any bars as there will be a lot of us.
Can you advise beer/vodka prices - I%26#39;m a cider man but I think that would be expensive.
Cheers
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If you behave yourseves, you shouldn%26#39;t expect trouble. Czechs don%26#39;t go round beating eachother up like the English do.
In the centre in expat pubs, beer may be up to around 2 pounds a pint, but you can get it below one pound in Czech pubs.
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