Feb. 13: Sunset Drive-In Theater, San Luis Obispo CA

It’s Day 44 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. The cities in this part of California almost merge together, yet Highway 101 is still a pretty speedy way to get between them. It took less than 45 minutes to zoom from Santa Maria to San Luis Obispo, home of the Sunset Drive-In Theater.

This place is a classic. It opened in 1951, and it still shows a lot of old-school touches. The concession stand it a small wood-paneled source of soda, popcorn, and the usual suspects. The marquee has well-maintained neon tubes that probably look as good as its first days. And that single huge screen has the drive-in’s name on it, as was so typical during the golden age.

Way back in 1998, I scheduled a Memorial Day weekend trip to visit several drive-in theaters in western Colorado. Someone asked if I’d get tired of seeing the same movie night after night, but I assured him that they always pick different movies from each other. I was wrong of course; that weekend every theater had the re-release of Titanic. I was reminded of that anecdote as I saw the The Lego Batman Movie again on the Sunset marquee. Three nights in a row isn’t so bad.

Miles Today / Total:  35 / 5126 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Lego Batman Movie / 33

Nearby Restaurant: Just a mile away from the Sunset is Madonna Inn’s Copper Cafe. They tell me it’s an icon, a tradition in San Luis Obispo. It’s a quirky coffee shop, the kind of place that has “Let’s eat and be forever happy” carved into a wooden arch. The Copper Cafe is open early and late, and its best feature is its selection of pies and cakes. I had a slice of pink champagne cake because where else am I going to get that chance?

Where I Virtually Stayed: You can’t get closer than across the highway, and that’s where the Embassy Suites sits. I could even see the back of the Sunset screen from my room window (since I asked for a high room facing east). I always love the evening reception of snacks and drinks, followed in the morning by a cooked-to-order breakfast.

Only in San Luis Obispo: There is a tourist attraction in downtown SLO that’s a little hard to describe or explain. It’s a narrow, 70-foot-long alley that’s known for its accumulation of used chewing gum on its walls, hence the name Bubblegum Alley. According to Wikipedia, some historians believe it started after WWII as a San Luis Obispo High School graduating class event. Others believe it started in the late 1950s, as rivalry between SLOHS and California Polytechnic State University students. By the 1970s, Bubblegum Alley was well established. Since then the gum graffiti has survived several temporary cleanings by the Downtown Business Improvement Association.

Next Stop: Madera Drive In Theatre, Madera CA.

Feb. 12: Hi-Way Drive-In, Santa Maria CA

It’s Day 43 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I left suburban Santa Barbara and got back on Highway 101 for a one-hour drive to the Hi-Way Drive-In in Santa Maria CA.

An article in the Santa Maria Times said that the Hi-Way was opened in 1959 and bought by current owner Bob Gran in 1979. My 1972 Motion Picture Almanac show only one drive-in in Santa Maria, the Park Aire which opened in 1949 and closed in the 1990s. I guess no directory is perfect.

I got here early enough for the Sunday-only flea market. None of those special protective roofs like they had in Florida and Arizona, but the temperature here never even grazed 70 degrees. Glad I had something warm to wear to watch the movie while drinking hot chocolate and eating popcorn.

The Lego Batman Movie was so good that I really didn’t mind watching it for the second night in a row, since that’s what the Hi-Way had for its early movie.

Miles Today / Total:  64 / 5091 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Lego Batman Movie / 32

Nearby Restaurant: I don’t get many chances to sample Hawaiian food, so I drove up Santa Maria Way to Zoe’s Hawaiian BBQ. I had a mixed plate with teriyaki beef, chicken katsu, and mahi mahi, plus rice and a scoop of macaroni salad. Zoe’s also had Spam on the menu, but I had to draw the line somewhere.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotel to the Hi-Way may be the best in Santa Maria. The Radisson Hotel is three miles from the drive-in, and it sits between a park and an airstrip. I felt pampered with a robe and slippers in my room; I never get that at the Hampton Inn.

Mother with three children at a migrant campOnly in Santa Maria: One of the most famous photos of the Great Depression and Dust Bowl in the 1930s was taken by Dorothea Lange at a former migrant labor camp along US 101 just north of Santa Maria. Lange was concluding a month’s trip photographing migratory farm labor around the state for what was then the Resettlement Administration. The photo’s subject, then unnamed, was Florence Thompson. Her identity was discovered in 1978 when Modesto Bee reporter Emmett Corrigan located Thompson at her mobile home and recognized her from the 40-year-old photograph. According to Roadside America, a California professor tracked down the site of that photo in 2013. “The professor hopes to erect a marker at the spot, but for now it’s just a weedy field.”

Next Stop: Sunset Drive-In Theater, San Luis Obispo CA.

Feb. 11: Santa Barbara Drive-In, Goleta CA

It’s Day 42 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I left the Los Angeles area and drove a couple of hours up the coast to the Santa Barbara Drive-In in Goleta CA.

All this week, I’ve been visiting California drive-ins that started with a single screen and added more. The Santa Barbara opened with two screens in 1966, became just a flea market in 1991, then reopened in 2010 as a single-screen drive-in.

After getting built on every edge of every town in the 1950s and 60s, the drive-ins that have persisted to today often have geographic protection. In this case, the Santa Barbara Airport immediately to the west probably prevents anything too tall from replacing the drive-in, and creeks to the east and west prevent encroachment from anything else.

West Wind, which runs the drive-in heaven I visited in Glendale AZ, runs the Santa Barbara and five others I’m looking forward to visiting. The company is a class act, as shown by the glorious panorama photos at the head of its Santa Barbara web site pages. You really should go take a look.

I was so glad when a fresh crop of movie releases came out Friday. For the first time in a week, I get to return to films I haven’t seen. Since the Santa Barbara has only one screen, I didn’t even have to make a choice.

Miles Today / Total:  114 / 5027 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Lego Batman Movie / 31

Nearby Restaurant: Sushi is not my favorite food. If I see it at an Asian buffet or some other setting that makes me suspect that it’s ordinary sushi, I’ll choose something else. But really great sushi is worth it, and the Goleta Sushi House is less than a mile from the drive-in, so there I went. It’s just a small, casual place, but they really knew how to make miso soup and salmon sushi for a reasonable price.

Where I Virtually Stayed: I guess folks like a good weekend getaway to Santa Barbara, because all of the closest hotels were a little pricey. It was a good excuse to try the Super 8 Santa Barbara/Goleta, where I got a decent night’s stay and enough coffee and oatmeal for breakfast to get me going while keeping a few more $20s in my pocket.

Only in Goleta: According to Wikipedia, Japanese submarine commander Kozo Nishino took revenge for an earlier cactus-based humiliation by shelling the Ellwood Oil Field in February 1942. None of the 20 or so rounds caused any serious damage, but the incident was used as justification for the Federal government’s internment of Japanese-Americans (most of them US citizens), which soon after.

Next Stop: Hi-Way Drive-In, Santa Maria CA.