Sunday, October 7, 2007

You wait half an hour for a bus...

Someone from Eesti Päevaleht Online with a video camera has been asking Joe Public what he thinks of the city's public transport. Turns out that apart from one young mother who only hopped on a bus to satisfy her tiddlywink's curiosity and a couple of people who end with "...but things seem to be improving", almost everyone has the same complaints.

1. They smell.

It's not very charitable to say so, but boy are there some stinky people in Tallinn: either the great unwashed or the homeless, often with the added pleasure of their bags full of empty beer cans as they head for the recycling points to claim their 50 cent refunds. The heady mix of dirty bodies, dank clothes and all manner of odours emitting from them does not a pleasant environment make on the city's buses, trams and trolleys when, in the case of the latter two especially...

2. They're dirty.

But then I suppose dirty people lead to dirty buses and what not. It doesn't help that the majority of them were made in the heyday of Soviet production when 'Made In Czechoslovakia' was still being stamped on everything. The trolleybuses come in for particular criticism on this count (except the snazzy new ones). It's the kind of thing where I always wash my hands as soon as possible after riding in them - even if it's the middle of winter and I was wearing gloves the whole time.

3. They're often late.

Or indeed early, as I keep finding with bus no. 8 now that they've changed the timetable but seem to have forgotten to inform the drivers. Sod's law though: on the days I set out earlier for the bus stop in case they do come early, they turn up 5 minutes after they're meant to.

4. They're always full.

Not that there's much you can do about it, I suppose. But in combination with the other three above, it does get to a straw-that-broke-the-camel's back kind of point. You've been waiting for ages for the thing, probably in the cold and drizzle, and when it turns up it looks like it hasn't seen a cleaner in years, everyone is packed in like sardines, many of them smell like they are sardines, and the man you're squashed up against has the worst case of dandruff you've ever seen. Which flakes off his scalp in your direction every time the doors open.

I would probably also add to the list that 5. the tickets, for what you get, are overpriced to buggery. I baulk at the €2 you pay to hop on one of Helsinki's trams, but given how efficient, comfortable and sparkly they are, the fact that the ticket is only twice as expensive as a trip on one of Tallinn's rusting 1960s trolleys is a small price to pay.

http://www.epl.ee/video/402794

5 comments:

úlfurinn said...

The new ones aren't much better. There's one particular model where the floor is ascending in the back – enough for me to hit the ceiling with my head.

phutty said...

Plus the ascending floor means falling over if you're not holding on to something when the thing jerks away from the stop is much more likely.

AndrewGoesBroadway said...

But you know what's nice about Tallinn's trams? If you show up at a stop and one has just pulled away, you can sprint to the next stop and get there in time to board. You can't do that in New York.

phutty said...

Are there trams in New York?

Anonymous said...

Hmmm but maybe it's not the best to compare Estonia to Sweden or to Finland in such matters. It would be like comparing the strength of a bear and a mouse... Okay, not so drastic, but still.
Estonia happened to have Soviet Occupation, which many other countries were lucky not to have.With 15-16 years to grow into a level West needed 60 is simply unrealistic. Sure, remarks are welcome always- they lead to improvements (hopefully) but among all the bads that Estonia has, some are not possible to make disappear with one finger snap.