The Bohemian male water demon came to be called
vodník or , but their ancient names have not been found in older sources. It dwells in every river, stream, or pond. Though several may share a body of water, they keep themselves apart since they are antagonistic towards each other. Sometimes the
vodník enters into a loving relationship with a human woman, and will live together with the family he has formed, but otherwise the bachelors are solitary. Those in the pond are considered more feral, living amongst the reeds, but those in the river are believed to live in crystal palaces in a whole expansive world found underwater, where they keep the souls of the drowned dead, inside pots. There are also a tale and a legend concerning the
hastrman or
vodnik living near mills.
Physical description The net-casting
vodník (cf. below) is described as a green man, and comes out of the water combing his green hair on a day he does not hunt drowning victims. But in several accounts he manifests himself as an ordinary human being (cf. ), or the peddler by the pond north of
Přeštice, wearing a dripping wet coat. He is known as the "green man" at the market, appearing like an ordinary man wearing a green coat, with the left coat-tip () always wet, and also missing the thumb on his left hand. The merchants welcome him because when he makes purchases, business does well.
Man-snatching The
vodník lures people into the water to drown them, and those who bathe after hours are especially vulnerable, but he can only drown those who were fated to die that way. Fishermen were afraid of saving a drowning man from the clutches of a vodník, because they would come in a bad way and wind up being drowned themselves. In one version the water demon spans a fine invisible net across the river to trap people. But he sits in the grass mending his nets on Friday, his day off from man-snatching. The peddler
vodník displays some sort of trinkets hanging on a rack in order to lure his prey into water. In the Quarter of Prague, the vodník was seen on a raft (, pl. locative
vorách) in the evenings, and he hangs red ribbons over the water to lure children and drag them down. A vodník in the guise of a red-haired man wearing green peddled green ribbons to a village woman, but the goods turned into grass when she returned home. The
vodník or
hastrman maintains a collection of captured souls inside pots in his underwater palace or mansion, as in the tale localized in Moldautein (
Týn nad Vltavou), here specified as "earthenware" () pots also filled with water. Here a poor day-laborer woman's eldest daughter becomes the Hastermann's servant, and when she sweeps, the dust she collects is gold. She liberates a soul from a noisy jar, which turns out to be her brother. She is forgiven, but after serving many years, homesickness hardens her decision to flee, and she frees all the souls on departure. The hastrmann pursues but she returns home to her siblings.
As frogs In a Bohemian version of the butcher tale, a man from
Předměřice was really a vodník, regularly shopping from a butcher at
Tuřice, but the out-of-town man's habit of pointing the finger at the piece of meat he wanted annoyed the butcher into cutting a finger off one day. But two days later, he was taking the valley path along the Iser (
Jizera) and encountered a huge frog which the curious butcher, but it turned into the client he maimed and dragged the butcher into water. recorded a tale about the pregnant wife of a vodník () in frog form, which compelled a housekeeper named Liduška to be its child's godmother, though this tale type has been discussed elsewhere as a widely disseminated piece of Slovak folklore (see under §Slovakia). In this
Moravian version (but recorded in
Bohemian dialect[?]), the vodník returns from his absence in the guise of a red ribbon (), attempting to lure and snatch Liduška, just as he is wont to do with girls with rakes
haymaking on meadows by the river. == Slovakia ==