skyring: (Default)
Skyring ([personal profile] skyring) wrote2009-03-12 12:22 pm

Rock Taxi

Shuttlebus
Shuttlebus,
originally uploaded by skyring.


A new city, a new destination, and the first thing I look for outside the airport is the taxi rank. Professional interest, I guess. What sort of cabs do they have here? What’s different about them? What nifty little feature does the cabbie have that I can blog about?

There is a free bus service from the airport to Yulara resort, and we loaded our bags aboard. “Ayers Rock has no taxis,” the driver advised us, with just a touch of smugness.

Rental cars are available, but are limited to 150 kilometres per day, just in case tourists decide to drive out to Alice Springs, a good four or five hours away.

Apart from the large buses running the airport transfer, there is a smaller shuttlebus looping around the various resort options every twenty minutes.

And that’s it. Of course, you can walk between places, and nothing is more than ten minutes brisk pacing in the desert sun, but it’s not the same as jumping into a cab for the local commentary, the personalised service and Radio Al-Jazeera playing in the background.

[identity profile] fancyhorse.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 03:39 am (UTC)(link)
Rental car customers can't drive anywhere they want to, as long as they buy the gas? We once drove a rental car from San Antonio, Texas across to Carlsbad Cavern, New Mexico, up to northern New Mexico and across to Flagstaff, Arizona, then down to Phoenix, Arizona and caught a plane back home. You can't do something in Australia?

[identity profile] skyring.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 07:47 am (UTC)(link)
Normally you can drive a rental anywhere, maybe a small relocation fee. But Ayers Rock is in the middle of a great desert and so they impose a local rule lest all their cars dribble off to Alice Springs.

[identity profile] fancyhorse.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah! I see. That makes sense. Thank you.