June 2: Pheasant City Drive-In Theatre, Redfield SD

Aerial photo of the entire Pheasant City Drive-in lot

photo from the Pheasant City Drive-In Facebook page

It’s Day 153 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. As I zigzag to find open drive-ins, I headed north from Gregory SD for a three-hour drive to the Pheasant City Drive-In Theatre just north of Redfield.

According to the Pheasant City’s history page, it opened in August 1953 as the Sioux Drive-In. It was the fourth Sioux of Dan Peterson’s State Theatre Company, joining its brothers in Brookings, Pierre, and Rapid City.

Don and Kay Archer bought Redfield’s Sioux in 1963. Kay’s parents had operated the drive-in, and the Rainbow Drive-In in Gettysburg SD, for many years. Don was teaching in Tulare SD, so the Sioux was a good summer job.

About 1970, the Archers moved to Chamberlain. In 1972, they sold the Sioux to Tom and Letha Gallup, who renamed it Pheasant City.

According to the Rapid City Journal, the drive-in was “on the brink of closure” when Dave and Stacey Marlow and her parents bought it in 2014 and installed a digital projector. “We just didn’t want to see it close,” Stacey Marlow said. “If it was closed, our community would lose something pretty great.”

It’s a good movie and a great drive-in movie, but I’m not sure I would recommend watching Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 for a sixth time in four weeks as I did here. I hope something else is showing Saturday night.

Miles Today / Total:  174 / 19716 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 / 69

Nearby Restaurant: Leo’s Good Food is a Redfield tradition, right down to its slogan “Family dining you can bank on”. Because it’s in a former bank building, you see. It started across the street in 1964, then moved to the bank in 1983. The salad bar is in the vault. My steak was prepared just right, and the lemon meringue pie topped off a great meal.

Where I Virtually Stayed: This is another one of those times when the Super 8 stands out in a small town. My room was comfy, had a fridge and microwave, and the classic Super 8 continental breakfast was there to get me on the road again.

Only in Redfield: On Thursday, I saw the pheasant statue in Gregory SD. Redfield has a taller pheasant statue, as part of the town’s claim to be Pheasant Capital of the World. As reported by Roadside America, pheasants were first released into the wild in North America near Redfield.

Next stop: Midway Drive-in Theatre, Miller SD.

June 1: Hilltop Drive-Inn Theatre, Gregory SD

It’s Day 152 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. This was my shortest drive in months – less than a half hour on US 18 from Winner SD to the Hilltop Drive-Inn Theatre west of Gregory.

The Hilltop is the oldest drive-in in South Dakota. It was built in 1946 and has the biggest screen, 72 by 40 feet.

Cecil Harsin started part-time as a projectionist at the Hilltop in 1954. He bought the place in 1989 and still runs it with his family. Louie Harsin told the Rapid City Journal in 2010 that drive-ins are “slowly making a comeback.”

And there was big news just a couple of weeks ago. The Daily Republic of Mitchell reported that the Hilltop had finally acquired a digital projector to keep operating. In a great story with a nice video, it wrote that the Gregory community had raised enough money for a down payment, and that fundraising would continue over the summer to pay it off.

The Daily Republic wrote, “Between 40 and 50 people attend shows each night the theater is open, Harsin said, and he hopes that number increases with the installation of the new projector.”

Even with the new projector, the Hilltop will probably just open on weekends. In any event, it was dark on this Thursday night.

Miles Today / Total:  22 / 19542 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 68

Nearby Restaurant: I’ve had great pizza at a bowling alley before, and with the drive-in closed for the night, I needed something to do. Gregory Lanes provides the food, the beer, and the entertainment for a good time in this small town.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Now there’s something you don’t see every day – a TripAdvisor listing with 18 reviews, every one of them 5 out of 5. That probably tells you all you need to know about the Gray House Motel, but I’ll also point out the fridge and microwave, the free wifi, and the mom and pop friendliness you would expect with reviews like that.

Only in Gregory: I was going to mention the South Dakota Outhouse Museum, but it recently moved out of Gregory. Instead I’ll point out the large pheasant statue that’s still there, with a plaque quoting Fortune magazine calling Gregory “The ground-zero of pheasantdom.”

Next stop: Pheasant City Drive-In Theatre, Redfield SD.

Video: Chief Drive-In Gets A Loving Look

KSWO, Lawton OK’s News Leader, ran a story last night about the Chief Drive In Theatre in Chickasha, about 45 minutes away. As part of its “One Tank Trips” series, it showed families having fun watching a movie under the stars.

The video includes interview clips with owner Barbara Egbert, who worked at the Chief as a 16-year-old and bought the place “about 11 years” ago. There’s that magnificent tree-lined entry ramp, a good example of how designers built up the drive-in experience when it opened in 1949.

The only real news is that the TV station captured and shared a few minutes of what visiting the Chief is like these days. That’s always something to celebrate, so check it out!