One of these days it was quite windy. The neighbor across the left rear corner, being a mason, has built a series of little sheds for this or that in his backyard, to the point where he had a rear fence on only a third of the borderline. Each shed had a flat concrete roof and was a bit lower than the previous one, so his little pekineser dog was able to climb. We heard it barking off the roof many times. Once it was so windy, that the wind swiped it off the roof into Juliška's yard.
sezam, 31st:
Just went to the bank to pay something and saw an incredible thing: the bank was practically in the blockade (and, as I heard then, for two hours already), because one man came to discharge the writs he bought on 17th of january. Namely, the interest on the writs was about 1.450.000% a month, payable before the due 95 days. It turns out they need to pay him some 65 billion old dinars, which comes to about 4500 DEM as per course of 12e6 din per mark. Of course, they phoned all the time, waiting for Father God to tell them what to do etc. On top of all that, some people did the "listing" for their flow accounts and when they saw what the late interest did to their being red for a few hundred thousand or few million of old dinars (similar interest as for the writs). On the subject of all that there arose a comprehensive discussion between the present masses and the attending lower, higher and very high bank personnel (the latter appeared from the "central" meanwhile). All in all, the banks can skin the part of the populace which happened to be in the arrears, but the interest will be in effect until the end of month, i.e. until tomorrow. On the other side, those who bought the writs by mid january, if they just be patient for the 95 days (to which extent the 1.450.000% interest is "guaranteed") score a total interest of 7.13e14 %, which means that, assuming that the exchange rate of old dinar does not change, for a writ bought for 1 DEM after the 95 days they get old dinars in the amount of 7,130 BILLION DEM (ha, ha, ha). There you go.