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TAXIS
In your average Western city - New York, for example
- the taxicab ritual is pretty straightforward:
1. Hail the vehicle with a wave of the hand
2. Get in and state your destination
3. Pay the amount listed on the meter
Advantages are consistency and simplicity; the
disadvantage is that people stating an address in
anything other than a New York drawl will be given a
scenic tour through three boroughs that ends up
costing as much as it would if you'd simply bought a
car yourself.
The only similarity the Russian taxi experience has
to New York is that none of the drivers speak
English. Here any vehicle can serve as a taxi.
Ambulances can be flagged down as well as off-duty
buses, army jeeps, private cars and, on occasion,
official city taxis. For the most part these rides
are safe and not too expensive, and it's a long-held
way for drivers to pick up a few extra rubles.
On 1 April 1997 a new local law decreed this practice
illegal, threatening heavy fines for chastniki (gypsy
drivers) caught picking up passengers. Elite teams of
GAI officers from the Transport Inspectorate were to
be trained to impersonate regular folk and sent out
undercover to solicit rides and bust drivers. As
usual, nobody took any notice and these rides are as
popular as ever.
Hail a ride by sticking your arm out and when a
vehicle stops open the door and state your
destination. The driver will either tell you to get
in, name a price, ask you to offer a price, or say no
and drive away. If you don't speak Russian this
negotiation can be a little tricky and the standard
result is a ride several times more expensive than it
would be for the average Ivan Sixshots. But it's not
that tricky...*
Learn your numbers...taxi prices are usually rounded
off to the nearest five rubles (see Language).
Know your destination...say it over and over until
you say it smoothly before even attempting to hail a
cab. Know the neighborhood it's in and the
approximate distance from where you are.
Don't renegotiate...the unwritten rules say that a
negotiated price can't be changed so even if the
driver does figure out you're foreign (and he will)
don't fork over your entire stash of hard currency.
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