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NORTH AMERICA TOLL FREE
Monday - Friday
From 9 am to 6 pm ET
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Peru vacation
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City Transport
It's a fairly simple matter to find your way around the rest
of this huge, spread-eagled city. Almost every corner of it is linked by a
regular municipal bus service , known to everyone as El Bussing, with
flat-rate tickets (around $0.2) bought from the driver as you board. In tandem
with these are the privately owned microbuses , older and smaller, more
colourful and equally crowded, but again with flat rates (25¢). Quickest of all
Lima transport, combi colectivos race from one street corner to another
along all the major arterial city roads. You'll see "Todo Arequipa" or "Todo
Benavides", for example, chalked up on their windscreens, which indicates that
the colectivo runs the whole length of Avenida Arequipa or Avenida Benavides.
Colectivos dash dangerously fast, frequently crashing and speeding off before
their passengers have got both feet into the vehicle, and might be anything from
a ramshackle Dodge Coronet to a plush fifteen-seater minibus; wave one down from
any corner and pay the flat fare (around $0.4) to the driver or fare collector.
You can catch colectivos or buses to most parts of the city from Avenida Abancay.
Taxis can be hailed on any street, and cost $2-4 to most central parts of
the city. It's worth reiterating that driving in Lima is incredibly
anarchic - it's not that fast, but it is assertive, with undertaking happening
as often as overtaking and drivers, especially taxistas, finding gaps
that don't appear to exist (one reason why there are so many damaged cars).
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