Tuesday June 2.
Woke up in Tbilisi back in the Rennasiance Hotel, this time
in a room with a terrace. I had the day all planned out. On the agenda was
getting duplicate auto keys made, going to the Georgia History Museum, and
contacting our local contact who was going to help us store the car while we
were in India. But the first task was to go to the insurance office to sign and
pay for our Georgia auto insurance. This had taken on the trappings of a holy
grail quest. The tour books and websites had led us to believe that Georgian
drivers were homicidal maniacs, that the pedestrians were suicidal, that the
roads consisted of little-car-eating potholes and that the traffic laws were
strictly enforced. We sought auto insurance from western companies, but they unanimously
do not provide primary auto insurance in Georgia. (We were, however, able to
buy secondary insurance from a Dutch company.) In Batumi, when we entered
Georgia, we purchased primary insurance, but the paperwork was not able to be
prepared prior to our departure. The arrangement was that we would sign the
paperwork and pay for the policy in the company’s Tbilisi office. It was not
ready until late Friday when we were at the baths and the office was not open
on the weekend.
In anticipation of going to the office on Monday, I got a
map and pretty detailed direction from the staff at the Rooms Hotel. They were
very cooperative, but as it turned out, very wrong. We set out in the morning
by Metro to the station specified by the staff. Turned out we were in a quasi
residential neighborhood. Walked around for a while and then took a taxi, but
could not locate the office. Finally called the office to get better
instructions, but aside from learning that the office was downtown (I should
have known that myself), I could not understand the instructions. Boarded the
train and went to the Tourist Information Office. They were very helpful and
gave us more maps. She suggested a taxi, as she claimed it was a long way from
a Metro stop and kindly suggested that I would not be able to find it myself by
car. We went out to the taxi stand and
when we showed them (several cab drivers were grouped together) the address, it
caused an immediate conference and a seeming debate about where the office was.
One driver finally agreed to do it, but he wanted three times what the
information officer said a taxi should cost.
So we walked away intending to try the taxi stand at a
hotel. They called after us and it turned out an unlicensed driver was willing
to do it at the requested price. He was flying through the streets and finally
arrived at a nondescript office building with no address. He and Karen went
into the building and I am told he interrupted a meeting to determine that in
fact we were at the correct location. We
gave him a big tip and then trudged into the office. We had now been at this
process for 5 hours. The insurance company staff was very helpful. Water and
toilet facilities were made available and then we began to sign papers. Finally
we were ushered upstairs to pay. We had been quoted a price in euros, but
learned that this office only accepted payment in laris, the local currency.
Fortunately I had cashed out our Russian friend of his laris (sending him home
with dollars), but even with that I was one lari short. The cashier made up the
difference.
With no local money we jaywalked through a large square to
get to a bank. Then the most remarkable thing happened. We were walking to the
Metro station and who did we see but the very lady, the groom’s mother, who was
going to help us store the car. Over a million people in Tbilisi and we bumped
into her. I am reminded of the line from Casablanca, “Of all the gin joints in
Casablanca you had to walk into mine.”
I did not have any doubt that she would do this, but I was
concerned about getting in touch with her and working out the details. We did
that on the street and arranged to meet at the Holiday Inn the next day. One
anxiety addressed and it would not have occurred without all our prior
misadventures.
We walked to the Metro and rode two trains back to Freedom
Square. [I managed a transfer without getting lost. I am better on the subway
than driving in Tbilisi.] Walked a bit into Old Town and then found a wonderful
restaurant.
Pur Pur is housed in an old building overlooking a small
park. It was wonderfully decorated with retro furnishings. Even the bathroom
was done that way. Several musicians played and sang. We had a table on a
balcony to ourselves overlooking the park. Wonderful meal and experience after
a maddening day.
Walked back and had a little ice cream. The Peace Bridge was
a nice visual experience on the way home.
Sounds like a very stressful day indeed. Amazing coincidence that you bumped into Tanya. Congratulations on getting the job done.
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