This lovely, pale shade of yellow is the color of taxis in Greece
This German-standard color of taxis has also been declared yellow by the government in Greece.
This is the cab of Niko, the taxi driver who took me to my hotel. It is only yellow in Greece.
When I first arrived in Greece, the hotel where I was staying sent a taxi for me. The taxi ride was free, along with a very low nightly rate at the hotel. The driver, Niko, met me at international arrivals. We walked to his cab. I noticed that many of the cabs were Mercedes and that they were a pale yellow—very different from the harsh yellow of NYC taxicabs. When we got to his cab, it was cream color. I said, “This is the color of a German cab.”
Niko spoke English well and told me about flying to Europe to buy the cab. He was part of a group of Greek cab drivers who got permission to use cabs in German cream color rather than yellow. He said the government decided to call cream color a shade of yellow, allowing any cabbie who wanted a cab that color to do so without special permission.
Like German cabs, there are no ads, phone numbers or writing of any kind on cabs. Not all are Mercedes, but all the cabs I saw were a paler yellow than is true in America.
As in Tbilisi and Jerusalem, I saw a lot of Priuses as cabs. Hybrids really are at their best in the intermittent, fast/slow/stop driving of city cabs. Niko wanted to keep driving Mercedes sedans as long as he could. We talked like two old motorheads (which we are) about the joys of driving the A5 Autobahn in Germany in the middle of the night and going 150mph.
Niko wants to travel to America someday, to New York and to California. He loves Greece and is very proud of the projected number of tourists for the coming year. He said 36 million was the projected number. The coronavirus will certainly put a damper on that, and on Niko’s travel plans.