Navigation

Travelling Turkey

News

  Home
Select a destination
Site Map
About Us

 

Related Articles

 

Online Travel Statistics

Travel Insurance Bargains for Brits

How to Pick a Travel Agency

Cheap Travel Insurance

Studying the International Travel Insurance Scene

Create your own Rome discount travel deal

Oahu Hawaii Travel and Vacation Attractions soon to be offered with Go Hawaii Card and Hawaii Travel Industry Vets will lead the Honolulu office.

Travel Single and Safe in Italy

Discount Travel - Eat Locally

RoomSaver.com Travelers Are Loyal to Hotel Rates, Not Brands

The Types Of Travel Luggage

How to get the most of your money when traveling

Traveling on a Budget? Try These Money-Saving Vacation Ideas

Traveling to Europe with your digital camera?

Be safe when traveling

Healthy Cruise Travel Tips

Western Europe cheap travel

Vacations - Survival Guide To Traveling With Kids

Noise Cancelling Headphones Are Not Just A Travel Accessory...They're A Travel Necessity

Traveling in Wheelchair

Travel in Style - Favorite Celebrity Vacations

Travel Netherlands - Beauty and History

ABCs of Adventure Travel

How Would YOU Like to Have a Travel Buddy Who Knows How to Pick up Girls!

Travel Europe - Ski To Your Hearts Content

Travel South France

Jasper – Travel to Canada’s Rocky Mountain Paradise

Jet Lag - 5 Pre-travel Steps to Reduce the effects of jet lag

Travel Around Lisbon And Portugal And Exploring Its Beauty

Traveller's Paradise In India, Kullu Manali, Himachal Pradesh


 
 






 

More Articles, Click Here

So you've gotten the flight in and checked out Bodrum/Ismir/Antalya/Your Local Tourist Town. You've seen the ruins, dismissed the coffee and embraced the raki. And you're thinking like Betty Friedan, is this it? Restless vagabond, you are in luck. Turkey is a country once and a half the size of France, or larger than Texas, with of the most efficient public transport systems in the Near East. So let me help you make the best of your attempts at getting around in this wonderful country. At the lowest tier of the system is the humble dolmuş. This is a publicly-run network of minibuses that covers most of the coastal area of Turkey, and some of the populated inland areas. As the routes often circle peninsulas it can be a cheap way to take in some of the most beautiful scenery Turkey has to offer. The routes in the Turquoise Coast especially are too spectacular to be missed. The dolmuş itself can be a daunting experience if you don't know how the system works, so let me give you the insider's low-down. First off, there are no bus stops. Your best bet is to stand by a shop or restaurant along its route and hold your hand out as if hailing a taxi. You'll also be thankful of the shelter if the bus is running behind schedule. Expect one to come every 10 minutes or so on popular routes. When the bus stops double check with the driver that he's going where you want to be: Bodruma gidiyorsun?(Are you going to Bodrum?). Now take a seat and work out how much you have to pay from the price list, usually stuck above the windscreen. Now for the fun part! Hand the money to the person in the seat in front of you. It gets passed hand-to-hand, man to child to donkey, all the way up to the driver. He will make out the change when he gets a clear stretch of road with, if you're lucky, one hand on the wheel and hand it back as before, person to person. Imagine that working in London! When you want to stop, shout something appropriate and say good evening


travel,,Flights,,vacation package

(Yakşamlar!) as you go. For longer distances Turkey has a well-run private coach network serving the larger towns and cities. At the station the various drivers will shout out their destinations as if selling fruit. You can buy a ticket in the station or from the drivers .They are very reasonably priced and shopping around is possible, though haggling is not likely to get you anywhere and will not be appreciated. As coaches are by law required to give regular rest breaks, trips are always relaxed and easy. On the more expensive coaches an attendant (usually a local teenager working for his holidays) will give out complimentary soft drinks, minerals, cologne and cool face towels. Very long trips, for example the route from Bodrum to Istanbul, are usually run at night. Through the smaller coastal roads can leave something to be desired, the major roads and inter-city routes of Western Turkey are of as high quality as any you'll find in Europe or America. That leaves air transport. Disappointingly domestic flights in Turkey are still prohibitively expensive for anything but tight-schedule business trips. The budget airline craze has not yet taken a foothold in Turkey so you could pay as much for a short internal flight as you paid to get to the country. As the Turkish saying goes, Epey acele, epey artık: great haste makes great waste. Above all, take the time to enjoy the beautiful Turkish landscape as you travel and I promise you will not be disappointed. About The Author The above article was written by Aaron Mulvihill of http://www.turkeyrenting.com . His company TurkeyRenting.com advertises holiday accommodation in Turkey in a searchable online directory. Visit http://www.turkeyrenting.com to find a villa or apartment in Turkey, advertise your own accommodation to or learn the basics of the language and culture of Turkey. He also manages a companion beginners Turkish language website at http://www.turkeyrenting.com/language .

Written by: John Gringham



Web www.hotelesyvuelos.com



GooGle News

XML error: mismatched tag at line 20