
WEIGHT: 59 kg
Bust: Medium
1 HOUR:150$
Overnight: +90$
Sex services: Ass licking, Parties, Fisting vaginal, Domination (giving), Games
Here, you will find beggars, junkies, prostitutes and homeless people β but no Robin Hoods. Here, everybody steals off everybody. So begins one of Europe's less family-friendly walking tours. Provided by homeless organization Pragulic, these tours aren't your typical jaunts around Charles Bridge and the castle. They're an altogether darker affair, shepherding tourists around seedier, lesser-known crevices of the Czech capital.
Each of the nine employed guides is either homeless or has spent a large proportion of their lives on the streets, and their tours explore the triumvirate of homelessness, drugs, and prostitutionβwith a bit of police corruption and the occasional mafia killing thrown in along the way. Our guideβthe most popular of the lot, according to Pragulicβis Karim.
A former male prostitute and heroin addict, he has spent 25 of his 40 years living and working on Prague's streets. Dressed in a leather duster that sweeps theatrically around every corner, he wears a jumble of pendants and trinkets around his neck and his eyes are caked in thick eyeliner. His handsβan inky mess of tattoos and elaborate gothic ringsβdon't stop moving throughout the tour, drawing attention to every crack den, brothel, or homeless hotspot he refers to.
There was a balcony in the station where people used to have sex, and others just used the park. Nowadays, the park is more of a living room for homeless people. A quick glance around confirms this; an assortment of beggars, vagrants, and drug-users are territorially occupying the benches, or passed out on the grass around them.
The exact number of homeless people in Prague is difficult to pinpoint, but estimates are around 3, βmade up of all ages and intellects, from young kids to college-educated adults. Karim guided us past the ones dozing in the park and dives down a side street that passes the National Museum, before we eventually settle in Wenceslas Square, host to mass marches during the Velvet Revolution and a fortress for many of Prague's pimps.