Difference between Route Taxis and Especial Taxis.
Taxis especiales :
What most gringos say is a taxi -- one you hire to take you to a specific place -- is here called a "special" taxi, un taxi especial. These are the guys who flock around you after you emerge from the pedestrian corridor walking into Mexico/Tijuana from San Ysidro. There you are at the sea of taxis beside the island of tacos. "Taxi, amigo?" they ask, offering to whisk you away to Revolution Avenue for only five or seven dollars. These are also the guys on every corner of Revolution Avenue, waiting to whisk you back to the border or other pLaCeS....
From the border you can go to the beach -- Playas de Tijuana -- for maybe ten dollars, or Rosarito for twenty. Anywhere else in town from five dollars AND on up, depending on the distance. CECUT and Plaza Rio should be only five. Of course, remember that prices change (upwards) as time goes by! And, paisans, don't forget to tip if the driver's good.
If you want to get to an exact place, with a minimum of trouble and crowding, and don't mind paying, un taxi especial is the way to go. (One of my best friends here, and in fact the first I made, back in March of 1999, was a taxista especial, who worked nights from in front of Plaza Viva Tijuana on the pedestrian route from the border to downtown. Last I heard he had changed to a seafood restaurant somewhere along Matamoros boulevard.)
Los taxis de ruta :
But when a Mexican in Tijuana says the word "taxi" or talks about riding in "los taxis," he or she usually does NOT mean an especial. They are talking about the "route taxis" -- los taxis de ruta.
Taxis de ruta are fleets of sedans and station wagons (the wagons can hold two or three more passengers than a sedan). They run on set routes all over town. Every route has its name and colors (some colors duplicate in different routes -- ojo!). Most -- not all -- routes radiate from downtown Tijuana ("el centro") and reach into the various suburbs and colonias of this sprawling city. If you walk around downtown and see lines of people waiting on different blocks to crowd into lines of taxis, well, you've just seen a route-taxi boarding zone. There are dozens of these boarding spots within a block or two of Revolution.
Taxis in each route ("ruta") are painted with a particular color scheme, and each route can be called by two names: its destination and/or its colors. For example, to get to his girlfriend Maria's house in La Mesa, Gringo Michael takes the Red & Blacks -- los rojo y negros (or more simply "the reds" -- los rojos) -- which leave from 4th and Constitution and run out "the boulevard" (Agua Caliente Blvd., which then changes its name to Diaz Ordaz Blvd.) to La Mesa, 5 & 10, ending up at Presa or Clinica 27. These are most often referred to as los rojos.
Another line which Michael used to take when he lived in Playas, the cream & yellow taxis to the beaches, are most often referred to by their destination: taxis a las playas.
Confused? Email us tijuanagringo@yahoo.com.