I recently played the
Party Million poker tournament in Rozvadov. Both the tournament and
the casino were great, but travelling to and from the venue without a
car proved even more difficult than I expected.
Rozvadov is a small
village in the Czech Republic on the German border. Unremarkable
apart from the fact that it houses the largest poker room in Europe.
King's Casino seems to be turning itself into a major player in the
European Poker scene but this was my first time at the venue.
King's Casino - Photo by Tomas Stacha |
I played day one online
and despite all my best efforts to build a stack or bust - I limped
into day two with a short stack. “It's a long way to go with 24 big
blinds” remarked my friend Paul and I had to agree.
Last minute travel plans
Last minute travel plans
Nevertheless I was
committed and I still had a shot, so I confirmed my b&b reservation that I'd made
several weeks ago. I usually have good attention to detail with these
things so I neglected to double check the specifics. I found a cheap
flight to Nuremberg at short notice and amazingly there was a rideshare listed leaving Nuremberg two hours after my flight landed
which went directly past Rozvadov on the highway. It was all too easy!
My driver was a
friendly Czech man who spoke no English. He was driving from
Strasbourg to Prague trying to pick people up on the way to help pay
for his petrol. He ended up being a bit late so I had a some time to
kill at Nuremberg Central Station. I found a cafe area with
plugs and wifi and settled in for a while.
Soon I realised that a
man was trying to attract my attention from about 10 feet away. At
first I ignored him but eventually became tired of his attempts to
beckon me over. Approaching him he informed me that he needed his
phone charged urgently, I told him to come and sit down and he could
borrow my USB cable. It soon became clear that he was legally not allowed to
set foot inside this establishment, though he never told me why. He stood resolutely 1cm in front of the entrance. He
also only had one eye.
Regrettably I have been somewhat conditioned to assume the worst and in these situations I
am always expecting to be ripped off or robbed or to be angled in
some way. Yet the curiosity always gets the better of me and I
usually go along with it, at least for a while, to see what happens. Almost always of course it is totally fine and on this occasion there was no scam and the guy just wanted his phone
charged. He was probably a shoplifter though...
My driver had two other
passengers stand him up so was happy to see me. We made small talk in
German and French. Sadly he didn't even like football so that was a
whole section of my smalltalk with men repertoire out of the window
straight away and we soon ran out of things to talk about.
Arriving at the truck stop
I first realised that
something was afoot when I got directions to the hotel from Googlemaps and saw it was
5 kilometers from Rozvadov – not actually in the village itself.
The sat nav soon led us there and it became clear that I was staying
by the side of the highway in what could only be described as a truck
stop. The key was left for me in the flower bed next to the front door in a manila envelope with my name on it.
Checking in I surveyed the view (quite easily as my room had no curtains). Going clockwise there was a brothel, loads of fields, another brothel and a large barn that had its roof caved in. I had a TV to watch the Champions League final and some snacks, so I passed up the chance to explore and settled in for the night.
Checking in I surveyed the view (quite easily as my room had no curtains). Going clockwise there was a brothel, loads of fields, another brothel and a large barn that had its roof caved in. I had a TV to watch the Champions League final and some snacks, so I passed up the chance to explore and settled in for the night.
The tournament itself
was excellent. The poker room is massive. You pay an entrance fee each
day and in return you get as much food and soft drinks as you would
like to eat. Thankfully I managed to double up within the first 20
minutes. A little later I ran my AK of spades into AA in a standard pot for a big chunk of my stack. The flop was king high with two spades. Somewhat favourable. I was able to complete the suckout on the turn and from then on I was able to pilot my stack into the money. Thereafter a period of supreme card deadness meant that I couldn't really get my
chips into gamble and I laddered up a few pay jumps before running my
short stack into AA. I finished in 61st out of 820 people - which meant the trip had been worthwhile.
After busting I went
back to my hotel in Brothelville. The wifi was down, so I vowed to
organise my departure in the morning. I would probably wake up early
anyway as there were no curtains.The next day the wifi was still
down, so using spotty 3g coverage I managed to find a few German bus
timetables on my phone. It is the countryside so the buses were
infrequent but it seemed easy enough.
I settled on Moosbach as town over the German border with the next bus departure which I
would be sure not to miss. This way I thought I'd save some time
and wouldn't have to wait around for as long. I used the shuttle service
from the casino and got the driver to drop me off there. He had never
heard of the place and seemed unsure of why I was going there but I
assured him everything was good.
The bus stop in Moosbach was in the central square and easy to find, but it was unclear which side of the road I had to stand on. I positioned myself in a spot where I could intercept the bus going in either direction and mentally patted myself on the back for being such a boss at navigating European public transport.
The bus stop in Moosbach was in the central square and easy to find, but it was unclear which side of the road I had to stand on. I positioned myself in a spot where I could intercept the bus going in either direction and mentally patted myself on the back for being such a boss at navigating European public transport.
The bus didn't arrive
on time. Five and then ten minutes passed. I was mildly perturbed,
this was Germany after all. Had I made a mistake? I checked the
timetable again and everything seemed ok. But then I had a thought.
It was a Monday in Spring – the day of the week and the season most
likely to have a public holiday. I was in Bavaria, the area of
Germany that is the most religious and has the most public holidays of all. I checked the
calendar on my phone. Pfingsten/Wittsun. Shit!
I needed help. Next to
the bus stop was an inviting guesthouse and bar. Using my very best
bad German, I went in and asked the guy working there if there were
any buses on holidays. “Nein” he replied and went back to his
work. I followed up by asking if he had the phone number for a taxi.
“Moment” he growled at me before retrieving his phone and
disappearing into the back room. He returned shortly afterwards to
bring me the news “He has no time”. Hmmmmmm. I enquired if there
was another rival taxi company and was met by a shrug and a look of
indifference.
I guess I wasn't
surprised that the taxi driver had no time. If he was the only taxi
driver in the area I'm sure he had loads of bookings and a packed
work schedule.
The man stared at me as
I pondered what to do. As I had no idea how to leave this town I
hesitated and refused to admit the conversation was over. Several seconds went by as we looked at each other. The room was silent apart from the distant hum of a vacuum cleaner elsewhere in the building. “Goodbye”
he eventually barked at me in English in a somewhat passive aggressive way and
stepped into the room behind the counter, closing the door.
Hugh Grant Mode activated
Which way should I go? |
Hugh Grant Mode activated
Quickly I surveyed the
layout of the establishment. It seemed that the door led to a some
sort of cuprboard or store room and not into the rest of the building
itself. If there was no other exit he'd have to come out of there
eventually. I decided to test my theory. I took a few steps and
banged the entrance door a bit. I then stood as still and as quietly
as possible. In my brain I activated 'Hugh Grant Mode'. Shit was
getting serious.
It took him less than a
minute to come back through the door and the look conveying a mixture
of surprise and contempt was priceless. I decided to give it one last
shot and asked in my most polite voice with what I hoped was
just a hint of desperation "Können Sie mir helfen?" - even using the polite Sie form of address.
The man looked me up
and down dismissively before delivering his final verdict on the
matter “NEIN”. He then began to move towards me, waving his arm
in front of him in the manner of attempting to swat a particularly
irritable fly. I began to suspect that he hadn't tried to call a taxi for me after all and it seemed that this interaction was becoming something of a dead end.
I've had a lot of conversations with strangers over the years, but this ranked as one of the worst of all time. Personally I feel like I made a good effort and bore little of the blame for the negative outcome. My conversation partner on the other hand left a lot to be desired. As I walked off defeatedly, I mentally crafted a variety of terrible Tripadvisor reviews about the establishment.
Time to call my girlfriend
I've had a lot of conversations with strangers over the years, but this ranked as one of the worst of all time. Personally I feel like I made a good effort and bore little of the blame for the negative outcome. My conversation partner on the other hand left a lot to be desired. As I walked off defeatedly, I mentally crafted a variety of terrible Tripadvisor reviews about the establishment.
Time to call my girlfriend
I was at a loss as to
what to do. I vaguely knew where I was but I had no way to leave. In
desperation I called my girlfriend. She is Bavarian but had not been back there for around 8 years and she totally hates the place. Her replies to my predicament were along the following
lines:
“Yes it is a holiday
so it looks like you are totally fucked”
“This sounds like the
kind of Bavarian town where I grew up, now I guess you understand why
I wanted to leave”
"Ha Ha. You'll never live this down...!"
"Ha Ha. You'll never live this down...!"
During the course of
the conversation Church Bells began ringing and suddenly the street
was full of Moosbach residents. A bunch of people in robes wandered by.
Pensioners ambled through the square. I sensed possibilities... surely
this bunch of God-fearing religious people would help a foreigner in need?
I was in the process of selecting which
person to go and talk to when a man in army fatigues carrying a giant
crucifix walked towards me. Yes, perhaps not him....
I walked a little and
found another guesthouse. This time the lady really wanted to help me. We got the phone book and between us called 7 or 8 different taxi
companies from the surrounding area. The best result we got was
someone saying he might come and pick me up in two hours. He couldn't
be sure though.
Religious rejection
Religious rejection
My last throw of the
dice was to just go and randomly talk to people who had just come out
of the church service. I hoped that after relaying my story, one of
them might decide to offer me a lift to the next town or know someone
who I could pay to drive me.
I told the first guy in
a mixture of English, bad German and hand gestures. He was amused,and
he laughed a lot at my situation. I was pleased, I was finally
establishing a rapport with the locals. The man then turned around
and relayed the story to a group of people who were closeby. They all
laughed too. Heartily. Hugh Grant Mode was clearly kicking into
overdrive.
“So what can I do?” I asked this group of people standing next to their cars, all of whom likely had the entire day off work. No idea, good luck was the cheery response and they all went back to talking amongst themselves. RE-JECTED.
“So what can I do?” I asked this group of people standing next to their cars, all of whom likely had the entire day off work. No idea, good luck was the cheery response and they all went back to talking amongst themselves. RE-JECTED.
Exhausted of ideas I
looked at the map on my phone and found the next town
my girlfriend told me about when I called her. I tried to convince myself that it
looked slightly bigger than this one. Admittedly surface area wise it
did look a similar size. However it was written in a slightly bigger
font on Googlemaps, so that must count for something, right?
McQueen leaves Moosbach (maybe) |
Of course *spoiler
alert* most of them get
recaptured or shot at the end of the movie, but I was trying to
remain upbeat so I pushed that part out of my mind.
Seeking inspiration I looked up the village on Wikipedia. The entry told me "Moosbach is a municipality in the district of Neustadt (Waldnaab) in Bavaria in Germany" - I scrolled down thinking my phone was buffering, but the page was blank and Wikipedia provided no further information.
By this point I was feeling parched. I walked over to the drinking fountain in the square, leaned in and took a few well needed gulps. Two elderly ladies looked at me with a blend of confusion and disgust. I noticed a sign next to the fountain which said No Drinking Water.
Seeking inspiration I looked up the village on Wikipedia. The entry told me "Moosbach is a municipality in the district of Neustadt (Waldnaab) in Bavaria in Germany" - I scrolled down thinking my phone was buffering, but the page was blank and Wikipedia provided no further information.
By this point I was feeling parched. I walked over to the drinking fountain in the square, leaned in and took a few well needed gulps. Two elderly ladies looked at me with a blend of confusion and disgust. I noticed a sign next to the fountain which said No Drinking Water.
Shanks's Pony was the only method of transport left available to me, so I
hauled my luggage on to my back and began walking. So long Moosbach,
I can't say I'll be coming back.
Hitchhiking debut
Hitchhiking debut
Now
at this point I will admit that I've never really fancied myself as
much of a hitchhiker. I am easily discouraged and would expect to get
downhearted at the constant rejection. My girlfriend had already
informed me “Nobody in rural Bavaria will ever pick someone up the
way you look.” Despite that withering prediction, I started
sticking my thumb up at cars who drove past me as I was walking. One
drove past, then two, then three. I was already getting fed up of
hitchhiking.
It doesn't look that far! |
After
walking for around 1km, something unexpected happened, a car pulled up
alongside me. Envisaging a volley of abuse from the driver for
breaking some obscure Bavarian law, I ducked down and peered through
the window. Behind the wheel was a man wearing a very large hat. He
offered me a lift.
The hat pays dividends
The hat pays dividends
Florian
was a very nice man and he explained his kindness by saying “Us hat
people need to stick together. This is a friendly gift from one man
wearing a hat to another”
He
said he would happily drive me to the next town. I checked with him
that I wasn't making him take a detour or that he was on the way to
something important. He told me he was on his way to lunch with his
friend, but his friend was a terrible cook so it didn't matter if he
was late. “So you are lucky and I am lucky!”
My driver and saviour seemed optimistic that there would be a bus from the next town, even
on a holiday and despite having never caught it himself. Pulling up at
the bus stop I was deflated to see that this was the same bus route
that served Moosbach. I tried to make one last attempt at deciphering
the many subsections of the timetable referring to public holidays.
There was either a bus in 45 minutes, or in 6 hours or not at all.
Florian
came over to assist. When he started reading the timetable backwards
it quickly became apparent that he had no idea how to read a bus
timetable. Using this knowledge I tried to encourage the viewpoint
that there wasn't going to be a bus for six hours by putting my
finger next to the time and saying “I think that's it” repeatedly. He seemed unsure but commented he hadn't read a bus timetable since he was 12 years old. We both
glanced around the town and it seemed to be entirely closed. He then
said those beautiful words “Just get in, I'll drive you, it is no
problem”
Thanks to Florian
(have I mentioned he was a very kind man) I was able to get to a
train station and plot how to get back to Berlin. When we pulled into
the station he said to me. “If you have some time, perhaps you can
go and take a look at the preserved medieval architecture of the town
while you are waiting for your train.” Yes I thought... that would
be nice... or I could just get the fuck out of Bavaria as soon as I
possibly can!
My journey back to
Berlin on the train was uneventful. I reflected that I cashed in the
tournament and got a taste of rural Bavarian life that I won't forget
or hopefully repeat. I was also happy that I didn't have to walk 25km
with my luggage. I expect I will be going back to 'Rozvegas' at some point as it seems to be having more and more poker tournaments. Next time I think I need to plan a more wisely - or better still, find a friend with a car who also wants to go along.
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