During my day out over the Prague Castle, it rained a lot, which I didn't mind at all. I think it cut down the tourist population a bit. I will describe a specific experience on my way down from Prague Castle along Zámecké schody, which is a path of stairs and cobblestone......really beautiful! The tale start at the top with this view and I will follow these two unfortunate ladies down the stairs! I don't know what the story was, early check-out? Late Flight? Last chance to see the Prague Castle? Here we go!

There is a specific sound you only hear in Europe’s historic centers. It’s not the church bells or the hum of a distant Vespa. It’s the clack-clack-clack-screech of plastic wheels being dragged across centuries-old stone.

While walking down the Zámecké schody—the majestic "Castle Stairs" that lead from the Prague Castle down into Malá Strana—I witnessed a scene that was equal parts cinematic and tragic. The view is spectacular from the top, the classic red roof, rain, spring cherry blossoms, its perfect! But then there was these two ladies...
The Zámecké schody is one of the most beautiful backroads in the city, offering sweeping views of red-tiled roofs. But it is also a gauntlet of over 200 stone steps. On this particular morning, it wasn't just steep; it was pouring rain.
I watched two young travelers attempting to navigate the descent. They weren't carrying their bags; they were engaged in a high-stakes wrestling match with them. Every few steps, a suitcase would catch on a slick edge, threaten to pull its owner down with it, or emit a groan of protest that suggested a wheel was about to meet its maker.
Watching them struggle in the rain highlighted exactly why the traditional suitcase often meets its demise in the Old World:
The Grip of the Void: Wet cobblestones and granite stairs have zero traction for small wheels. What works on a polished airport floor becomes a dangerous slide on a Prague hillside.
The Spiral Staircase Surprise: If you aren't fighting the outdoor stairs, you’re likely fighting the indoor ones. Many of these beautiful historic buildings haven't seen an elevator since they were built in the 1700s.
The Logistics of "Lugging": Once you're soaked through and your arm is vibrating from the "cobblestone tax," the romance of the city starts to fade.
As I watched them disappear into the mist of the Malá Strana, still wrestling with their luggage, I was reminded of the golden rule for traveling these regions: If you can't carry it comfortably on your back, it’s going to be your enemy.
Europe wasn't built for wheels; it was built for feet. Trading the roller bag for a solid travel pack isn't just about saving your wheels—it’s about saving your sanity (and your back).
This is nothing specific about Prague, I have learned my lesson 20 years back during my first trip through Greek Islands. I have always travelled with a backpack since in Europe, even on longer trips. When our kids were born we carried them in bigger backpacks (I am glad that is over! Phew!). Now that they are teenagers, we all carry just backpacks.
Here are my ladies through Venice airport on a weeklong trip last year.
Many charming boutique hotels or historic rentals in cities like Lisbon or Edinburgh are in buildings that pre-date elevators. Lugging a 40lb suitcase up three flights of a narrow, 100-year-old wooden spiral staircase is a workout nobody wants on vacation. In older quarters, sidewalks can be barely wide enough for one person. A wide suitcase forces you into the street or makes it impossible for others to pass. Hopping on and off regional trains or crowded metros is significantly easier when your luggage is strapped to your back. It keeps your hands free for tickets, maps, or steadying yourself during a sudden stop.

Here they are at Brussels Central Station earlier this year. Again it was a week long trip, and everything fits in the backpack. If you can that the rule, your world spins around that rule and kids understand the joy of travelling light and how convenient that is in Europe. Then you like it so much that you want to do it everywhere!


You can check out this post and your own profile on the map. Be part of the Worldmappin Community and join our Discord Channel to get in touch with other travelers, ask questions or just be updated on our latest features.
Travelling light anywhere is a good idea - it's only a pain if it's winter and have to carry more winter clothes! Wasn't there someone on Hive that proper injured their foot coming down some stairs in Europe? Rings a bell. Those cobbles can be a pain! But are so definitely quinetessentially Europeon city.
There have been revolution in winter clothing over the last 10-15 years. I have travelled for 1 week in Ladakh in the high Himalayas with the family carrying only backpacks. It is totally possible and not even difficult. Also if teenage girls can do it, anyone can do it :)
DAAAAAAADDDDDDDDDDDDD!
Hey I'll always carry a backpack, what do you think I am, a granny or something? Though when we do that initial trip to a base in the UK, I take a carry on as well as we can fit a lot more stuff in there ready to repack for backpacks for other trips... Must admit it's good to use it to put my feet up on at airports :P
View more
I think it's funny the way you made a story out of the difficulty of these two ladies--the way you followed their progress (lack of progress) and raised the experience to an observation on travel culture.
The first time I went to Europe as a young woman I carried an enormous suitcase. I felt like Sisyphus. That suitcase plagued me everywhere I went.
Last time I went to Europe (2000) it was with my sister. We are similar in build and weight. I shopped at a specialty store for washable, foldable, lightweight clothes. One set of clothes for the two of us. While we didn't backpack, luggage wasn't an issue because we just traveled light. We were away for three weeks and I have no memory of the luggage at all :)
When I travel alone I have plenty of time and absolutely no schedule to keep up. So I have do whatever whimsical thing that comes to my mind :)
I travel so much, both for work and for personal reasons that I have no choice but to make it as effortless and efficient as I can. Otherwise I would be tired and miserable :)
Hello @azircon, what a great story. You're absolutely right: in historic cities, the rolling suitcase is the worst enemy. Greetings from your friend @solorzanot.
No reason to do two @ tags. When you write a comment to a post no tag is needed.
In the old days of Soviet Union the suitcases or bags didn't have wheels on them so you had to carry them everywhere... cobblestone would not have been a problem 😀
Back in those days, travel for leisure was not much of a thing. When you had to carry, you just did I guess :)
I bought a set of those packing cubes recently and they're really good!! We're still using a suitcase coz we don't have decent back packs, but I may have to get one now and ditch the suitcase for future trips
Yes packing cubes are great but suitcases are not. If you see the pictures above the suitcases were small and standard cabin luggage but you got to carry them by hand up and down the stairs, and even with the lightest and smallest of the suitcase you would struggle. By the way, this was my beautiful apartment on location at Charles Bridge
Imagine carrying your suitcase up this after a long flight, to the third floor, as there was no elevator. You see numerous people like this all over Prague struggling! And they don’t have to. All these luggage can fit into a backpack if it is a decent one.
Most of the old buildings in Europe don't have elevators, and they're usually the ones with the most character. I had to lug our 15kg case down three floors in Naples recently because hubby hurt his foot, luckily it was down and not up!!!!
Those small cases are very useless in deed, the shell itself takes up a lot of space, dunno why people bother
I remember when I first started traveling through airports I just had one of those suitcases with two wheels. I saw all these people moving around so quickly with four wheels and I thought that must be so much better. Now I have one with four wheels and I realize it really isn't any better, just different. Beautiful shots from your trip despite the rain and the "hazards".
The four wheel suitcases are indeed better than two wheel ones. They are excellent through airports and business trips in the US. Anywhere you will be between airport, taxi, hotel, conference room and back they are great. But their utility completely falls apart anywhere with stairs and cobblestone streets.
It feels like you should have started with, "Dedicated to Suitcases and Backpacks" 🙂
I also got a quote/rule here, "If you can't carry it comfortably on your back, it’s going to be your enemy", I find it useful.
Photographs are beautifully and intelligently taken, as always. Rain does have an effect not only humans (mentioning human mood) but on the places as well and this is quite obvious in these photos.
What is your experience about visiting a place in normal weather and in rain, do you feel differently.
Beautiful pictures and your narration of the women with the suitcases made me laugh!😆
Clever storytelling.
I never thought about what it might be like traveling in Europe and the importance of a backpack. I have a "good enough" backpack for work but your post is making me think it may be time to buy a good travel backpack. I love the idea of traveling light.
If you google "Paul Akers Lean Travel" he has a book and some great YouTube videos about traveling light. I think you would like it.
This is the one me and all four of my family members currently use, on every single trip. I have literally traveled the world with this. The girls in both the family pictures, all wearing this backpack. They have men and women versions, same volume.
https://www.rei.com/product/227956/rei-co-op-trail-40-pack-mens
My wife and I are both geologists, we have been "travelling light" for last 35 years :)
I checked the video......doesn't fit my style.
No suitcase. :)
Also that is wayyyyyy too much :)
I am in fact try to approach Jack Reacher model, when travelling solo :) I am not quite there yet. You just wash your clothes at hotel sink at night :)
I haven't carried a spare shoe/flip flop in decades.....
I love the Jack Reacher books! Only travels with a toothbrush and buys clothes and the thrift store instead of doing laundry. Thanks for the reminder of this :-)
Apprecicate the link to the backpack, I'll check that one out.