Meet our guides
Marek
Listener with quiet confidence
How would a guest describe you after spending a few days traveling with you?
Probably as someone calm and easy to be around. I care about the details, but never in a stressful way. I think guests would feel looked after —
and sense how much I genuinely enjoy sharing Czechia.
What made you fall in love with Czechia — or keep falling back in love with it?
We spent many years traveling, and when we came back, I saw Czechia with new eyes. The way history and landscape are woven together still
surprises me. It’s a country that reveals itself slowly, and I like that.
What does being a host mean to you when traveling with guests?
It means inviting people into something personal. I try to help them look beneath the surface — to understand the context, the habits, the quiet things that shape everyday life here. It’s about opening a door, not giving a lecture.
Can you share a moment from a journey that really stayed with you?
The most emotional moments are journeys where guests trace their family roots. Standing together in a small village, a church, or a cemetery connected to their past can be incredibly moving. Those moments feel less like travel and more like coming home.
How do you know when it’s time to slow down — or simply stay a little longer?
You can feel it when guests stop looking around and start just being there. When a moment quietly holds everyone’s attention, there’s no need to rush. That’s usually when the best memories form.
What’s a small, everyday Czech moment you love sharing with guests?
Sharing a simple meal. Whether it’s dinner at a local place or homemade cakes and potato pancakes, food has a way of breaking barriers. Those are often the moments when conversations become more open and relaxed.
If guests remember just one feeling from your tour, what do you hope it will be?
Authenticity — the sense that what they experienced was real, unfiltered, and human.