Jessica S.
Yelp
3.5 stars
Most of my colleagues back home thought it strange that we wanted to take a trip out of Praha in order to visit the ossuary. It's macabre, it's maybe a tiny bit creepy - why would we want to go?
Honestly, a morbid curiosity drove us. That, coupled with a love of history and a sense of adventure, got us out of the city on our last day in town.
We took the train out, and from the stopping station, it's about a ten minute walk. They do have shuttles that run on a pretty regular basis, but it's not a bad walk at all, and after being on a train for an hour, I wanted to stretch my legs.
It's not hard to find the ossuary itself. There are signs pointing the way, and even if you can't read Czech, the images are pretty easy to decipher.
The "WOW" factor starts from the outside - the cemetery in front, the sculptures on the street...and then you step inside, and you're face-to-skeletal-face with the sculptures. And a ticket booth.
I know they have to make their money, to help with the upkeep of the ossuary and the grounds around it, but it's the first tourist location that *felt* touristy. I don't know how to explain it.
So, we paid for our tickets (choosing only to visit the ossuary and the cathedral), and added in the audio tour. We thought it was a cheap addition, and it was, for a very good reason. It was short. Super short. Almost ridiculously short.
The tour takes you to four different stopping points along the chapel, which is kind of ridiculous because the chapel itself is tiny. I had expected it to be large, expansive, full to the beams with bones. And while it did have bunches of bones, it certainly wasn't as large as I had expected it to be.
And the audio guide was really a waste of money, cheap as it was. The guide was most talkative at the very beginning, where he told you how the guide would work. Otherwise, he was abrupt and really didn't impart much information.
It's worth a look if you've an interest in things like this. I'm glad we went. But, I wish we would have paid a bit more attention to the train schedule, so that we could have gotten back to the city earlier. As it was, we visited the ossuary, the cemetery around it, the cathedral down the street, had lunch, stopped in a couple of the gift shops, and walked back to the station, and still had over an hour to wait for the next train.
So, it's really not a full-day trip, if you're considering going. It's interesting - some may call it fascinating - but won't take up your whole day.