Batumi port
Batumi Mosque
Murderer's museum
Batumi Botanical Garden
Under a banana tree
Batumi Botanical Garden
In the middle of nowhere
The 'old times'
Borjomi town
Typical view in Svaneti
A troglodyte town in the Caucasus
Uplistsikhe
Uplistsikhe
Uplistsikhe
Uplistsikhe
Uplistsikhe
A Cult
Uplistsikhe
A church
The rock
The very top
Countryside seen from Uplistsikhe
The Theatre
The weariness of a low-cost travel
Wonderful green mountains of Ossetian part of Cauc…
Wonderful green mountains and our story
Something about the God
Inside the church darkness
Bagrati cathedral in BW
Somewhere along the road in Georgia
Svaneti
Svaneti
The mountain river
This is Caucasus
Streets of Mestia (with power lines)
Trekking view at Mestia
Caucasus - Svaneti
Svaneti - a view
A Cross facing the majestic Caucasus
Sphinx or a mother
Svan towers
Trekking around Mestia
Mestia - the centre of Svaneti
Hotel / Zugdidi
Hotel / Zugdidi
See also...
Buildings - Bâtiments - Edificios - Edifici - Gebäude - Edifícios - Gebouwen - Budynki
Buildings - Bâtiments - Edificios - Edifici - Gebäude - Edifícios - Gebouwen - Budynki
Keywords
Cars of Kutaisi


In 1999, the vehicles on the roads in Georgia were quite diverse. The most common car models were Lada Samara, Niva, Volga, O. Astra, VW Golf, H. Accent... The majority of cars on the road were old and damaged (described by some traveller as something straight out of 1975), with many spitting toxic fumes and probably many of these cars would not pass inspection in Europe.
ccording to the Georgia Department of Public Safety's 1999 Annual Report the motor vehicle travel continued to grow at a rate of 5% each year, and the data from the National Statistics Office of Georgia show that the number of registered vehicles increased from 762,200 units in 1999 to 1,490,200 units in 2021.
And one more observation. The policemen used whistles to stop the car and gather some pocket money to offset their extremely low wages. Locals said that the police only checked on in the morning, so the people who could not afford 'fines' would only drive in the afternoon.
ccording to the Georgia Department of Public Safety's 1999 Annual Report the motor vehicle travel continued to grow at a rate of 5% each year, and the data from the National Statistics Office of Georgia show that the number of registered vehicles increased from 762,200 units in 1999 to 1,490,200 units in 2021.
And one more observation. The policemen used whistles to stop the car and gather some pocket money to offset their extremely low wages. Locals said that the police only checked on in the morning, so the people who could not afford 'fines' would only drive in the afternoon.
William Sutherland, Berny, Nouchetdu38, ColRam and 7 other people have particularly liked this photo
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