trentusjuventus
Member
- Joined
- May 25, 2012
- Posts
- 207
Day 4 - Around Tel Aviv
As our friend had to work on Monday, we had the day to ourselves to check out the sights of Tel Aviv. The city is quite compact and easy to navigate, but an even better way to do see it is to rent a bike from the public bike sharing program Tel-o-Fun. There are stations all over the city where you can rent and return bikes. For tourists, all you need is a credit card to register, and you can do it at the electronic kiosks attached to every rental station. Just swipe your card, enter your details (skip the bit about an ID number and phone number), and then choose a bike. There are two parts to the rental, a daily "access fee" (NIS 17) which gives you access to the program for the day (you can buy multiple days or months if staying longer), and then a rental fee. From memory, the first 30 minutes is free, then the price goes up from there. We paid about 32 shekels and 2.5 hours, which was more than enough. The bikes are heavy and a bit coughbersome, but you can't really expect much more from a public sharing program.
As it was our last night in town, we headed out to a restaurant on the recommendation of a local friend. Goocha (or Goo Cha, I'm not sure) is predominantly a seafood restaurant with what I guess you would call 'Israeli fusion'. We sat outside, but there is also a bar which faces the kitchen with a glass barrier so you can see the chefs at work while you eat, which I'm told is very popular. They also have a great wine menu with some very nice Israeli wines.
As our friend had to work on Monday, we had the day to ourselves to check out the sights of Tel Aviv. The city is quite compact and easy to navigate, but an even better way to do see it is to rent a bike from the public bike sharing program Tel-o-Fun. There are stations all over the city where you can rent and return bikes. For tourists, all you need is a credit card to register, and you can do it at the electronic kiosks attached to every rental station. Just swipe your card, enter your details (skip the bit about an ID number and phone number), and then choose a bike. There are two parts to the rental, a daily "access fee" (NIS 17) which gives you access to the program for the day (you can buy multiple days or months if staying longer), and then a rental fee. From memory, the first 30 minutes is free, then the price goes up from there. We paid about 32 shekels and 2.5 hours, which was more than enough. The bikes are heavy and a bit coughbersome, but you can't really expect much more from a public sharing program.
As it was our last night in town, we headed out to a restaurant on the recommendation of a local friend. Goocha (or Goo Cha, I'm not sure) is predominantly a seafood restaurant with what I guess you would call 'Israeli fusion'. We sat outside, but there is also a bar which faces the kitchen with a glass barrier so you can see the chefs at work while you eat, which I'm told is very popular. They also have a great wine menu with some very nice Israeli wines.
Last edited: