Rychly Prachy Dvaasedmdesaty Ulovek | Praha 04.03.2013
I found my old moleskine notebook last night. Between the coffee stains and the faded metro tickets, one line screamed off the page: “04.03.2013 – Rychlý prachy – 72 úlovek – Praha.” Let me translate the slang for the new generation. Rychlý prachy isn’t just “quick money.” It’s the dangerous kind. The money that arrives faster than a tram going downhill from Karlovo náměstí. The kind you don’t ask questions about. And úlovek (the catch)? That’s what we called a successful flip—be it a vintage guitar, a forgotten painting, or a suitcase full of something that fell off a truck near Holešovice. Prague in early March 2013 was a grey, wet sponge. The tourists hadn’t arrived yet. The Charles Bridge was for locals only. Desperation was cheap, but information was cheaper.
For me, that date is .
He bit. I won’t bore you with the logistics of hauling 72 items across Prague on a broken luggage cart from Hlavní nádraží. Here’s the money part. rychly prachy dvaasedmdesaty ulovek praha 04.03.2013
I have interpreted this as a noir-style retrospective or a true-crime/lifestyle blog entry about a specific, high-stakes hustle in Prague. The Vault: Rychlý Prachy & the 72 Úlovek (Prague, 04.03.2013) I found my old moleskine notebook last night
In 2013 Prague, that was three months’ rent. That was freedom. That was rychly prachy . Of course, there’s always a shadow. Two of the 72 items didn’t sell. One was a dictaphone with a strange Russian voice on it (I threw it into the Vltava). The other was a hard drive wrapped in a sock. The money that arrives faster than a tram
April 16, 2026 Location: Letná, Prague