Matatus are mini buses that travel all over Kenya. In early 2005, the government changed their policies on matatus. Before, if an operator wanted to cram 300 people into the minibus, that was alright. No longer. (A great change!) 14 passengers is the max - and seatbelts are required by law for all 14. Moms frequently carry their kids on their laps (beyond the 14 rule) - but that's another story.
The government will be phasing out the 14-seaters, but that's yet another story.
"Matatu" in Swahili means that you could travel for 30 cents, a standard fare wherever and whenever you went: three 10 cent coins. (Special thanks to my friend toneloc who gave me the truth on that!)
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Where you can find Paul Merrill
If you are looking for Paul Merrill, go over to Shiny Bits of Life , which is my personal blog - or Greener Grass Media . Thanks! (I no ...
-
On weekend mornings, I brew enough for Heather and me. On weekday mornings, I only brew enough for me. (Heather gets her caffeine via tea, d...
-
Today I have a guest photographer - Josh Cadd. He and his family moved to Nairobi about six months ago. Part of getting settled meant buying...
-
This old petrol (gas) station is close to Voi, the closest town to the main entrance to Tsavo National Park. Tsavo is even bigger than some ...
5 comments:
It actually used to cost 30 cents, a standard fare wherever and whenever you went. Three 10 cent coins.
Ha! That reminds me, did you check out the beaded British bus I'm workin on??
Sasa, I miss the matatu's of Kenya!
Mark James Bowness
One standard comment (kidding, of course) about the meaning of "matatu" was that it meant "there's always room for 3 more."
Bob
I was there in Sept and we NEVER had 14 people in a matatu, 21 was the most ... I love the chaos.
I'm going back next week (dec 4th)
Post a Comment