After Manuel Antonio Hay a ways down the road, there is a glorieta/traffic circle. The road is very good and if you prefer to drive slower than the 100 kph (about 60 mph) on the open road, then stay to your right on that wide shoulder lane so that others can pass you. There are three or four speed bumps/topes in each of those villages. You go through three villages.Macario Gomez, Francisco Uh May, and Manuel Antonio Hay. It's a straight shot pretty much from Tulum to Coba. I would do that again for sure.īut I missed having a car for little trips into town and such, so I may do a blend next time.įor that trip to Coba, I would rent a car for the day. That was an excellent way back and it happened to mesh well with my flight schedule. Last September I took the ADO bus from Tulum direct to the airport (3 stops but no changes). Also really enjoyed the fact that no one would pull us over on the way back to the airport (not that this has happened to me more than once, but it was nice avoiding that risk). Nice guy, nice van, enjoyed the speediest plane-beach trip I've had ( renting a car always takes another half hour or so), enjoyed seeing stuff instead of driving that boring, long road. Driver met us at the airport the minute we walked out the door, picked us up at our hotel exactly on time. I booked a transfer with the folks at Playa.Info and the service was great. I have always been an inveterate car renter, but this last trip decided to skip the car. Take the bus or a transfer down from the airport, live with taxis for part of the time, rent a car in town for part of the time to do day trips.
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