May 1: Idan-Ha Drive In Theatre, Soda Springs ID

photo by arbyreed, from the Carload Flickr pool

It’s Day 121 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, what you might consider the start of the middle third of the year. My drive was a very fast straight two-hour shot up the interstates from the Motor Vu Drive-In Theatre in Riverdale UT to the Idan-Ha Drive In Theatre in Soda Springs ID.

When did the Idan-Ha open? A 2013 article in the Idaho State Business Journal claimed it “has been a part of Soda Springs for nearly 60 years,” but that raises a couple of questions.

Some time around 1953, the Dawn-a-Vu Drive-In opened for business, built by Donald M. Mendenhall and named for his daughter, Elnora Dawn. Its capacity was about 300 cars. In my copies of the International Motion Picture Almanac, the only drive-in in Soda Springs from 1959 through 1976 is the Dawn-a-Vu. In the 1982 IMPA, the Dawn-a-Vu is gone but the Idan-Ha is listed, with a capacity of 200. There’s now a car dealership that extends into what could have been back rows of the drive-in. I can’t find any confirmation anywhere, but I’m guessing it just changed names around 1980. Update: A note from the current Idan-Ha crew said, “I am uncertain when the name changed but I thought that it happened when Owen owned it in the 80’s.” Bingo!

Back to that article, Idan-Ha head Jeff Bowen was afraid the drive-in would have to close after the 2013 season because it didn’t have a digital projector yet. “Bowen runs the drive-in mostly as a hobby and said he is ready to retire, but he already has someone lined up to take over the venture if it doesn’t close,” it said. Something worked; the Idan-Ha’s Facebook page listed movies from its first post in September 2014 through the 2016 season.

The Idan-Ha typically runs a short season; in 2016, it was from mid-May to the end of August. It’s also unusual in showing just a single movie every night, but that’s typically all I need before hitting the sack. On the first day of May, I was able to hit the sack early.

Miles Today / Total:  138 / 13298 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 55

Nearby Restaurant: The Arctic Circle is a restaurant chain, but only a regional chain mostly in Utah and Idaho. As the name implies, it’s partly an ice cream shop, but it also dishes up some fine burgers at very reasonable prices. Its French fries come with a unique fry sauce that beats the heck out of ketchup, and I loved my made-to-order chocolate malt.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There’s no elevator, but there’s plenty of history at Enders Hotel & Museum, which was built 100 years ago. The bed in my room was comfy, and the old hissing radiator reminded me of an apartment where I used to live. It came with a voucher for breakfast at the Geyser View Restaurant, so I could stay wrapped in the past while I watched a geyser that actually wasn’t there when the hotel was built. (See below.)

Only in Soda Springs: Soda Springs has a geyser that’s even more faithful than Old Faithful. According to Wikipedia, on November 30, 1937, a well drilling operation was surprised when it unintentionally released Soda Springs’s famous captive geyser, which shot 100 feet into the air. It has been capped and a timer activates it every hour on the hour. There is now a park and a visitor center at the site.

Next stop: Spud Drive In Movie Theater, Driggs ID.

Video: The Superior 71 Gets a Loving Look

There’s nothing exciting or novel about the Superior 71 Drive-In, just a few miles from the Minnesota border in Spirit Lake IA. It’s just the wonderful culmination of one retiree’s dream to build a new drive-in theater, incorporating a neglected screen nearby.

Thanks to KARE, Minneapolis-St. Paul’s News Leader, we get this affectionate tribute to a slice of Americana. It’s always great to get good video of an active drive-in, and this one’s a treat. Enjoy!

Apr. 30: Motor Vu Drive-In Theatre, Riverdale UT

One of the Motor Vu screens

Photo by Shaun Fisher via Flickr

It’s Day 120 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, the end of Month Four. My drive was a straight shot up the interstates, just about 40 minutes from the Redwood Drive-in Theatre in West Valley City to the Motor Vu Drive-In Theatre in Riverdale UT.

The Motor Vu opened in June 1947 as a single-screen drive-in. According to a fine article in the Ogden Standard-Examiner, it added two screens “in the 1980s” and a fourth in 1996. The Motor Vu switched to digital projection just before the 2016 season.

Former Motor Vu attendant Howard Coleman bought the place in 1979. Three sons own it now, and one of them, Brent Coleman, manages the drive-in. He said that the conversion to FM radio sound helped attendance. “Before — you see the speakers hanging off the poles? You’re dealing with wire that’d been in the ground for 60 years,” Coleman said. “If you ever got a short, it didn’t just take out the pole, it took out the whole row. On weekends, you could never be 100 percent capacity because the speakers couldn’t keep up with it.”

The concession stand here had all of the drive-in standards, with burgers, hot dogs, pizza, and nachos. Although it has four screens, only three of them were active this weekend. (They light up the fourth when the drive-in season heats up.) All three early shows were movies that I’ve seen, so I chose another viewing of The Boss Baby, the only option that I’d only seen once.

Miles Today / Total:  39 / 13160 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Boss Baby / 55

Nearby Restaurant: As much as I try to eat healthy, as much as I try to sample local cuisine, sometimes it’s just a Sunday afternoon when I want beer, wings, and lots of sports. (Or is it sports, wings, and lots of beer?) You probably know what the Buffalo Wild Wings is like; except for a few quirky older locations (which this isn’t), they all serve up a standard experience for the carnivore in us.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There aren’t any hotels in Riverdale, and there’s a large Air Force base between the drive-in and most of the options in Ogden. One of the closest options is the Hilton Garden Inn in Ogden, and it served up the standard HGI amenities. My room was clean and comfortable, and breakfast was free for me because I’m a Hilton Gold Card member.

Only in Riverdale: Next door in Ogden, a former A&W Burger fiberglass teenager statue has been given a painted beard and re-purposed as a chainsaw-wielding lumberjack. In his other hand, he holds a small log. Now he’s the front-door mascot of Wilson Lane Service, which sells and repairs outdoor equipment. (You can see photos of him here and here.)

Next stop: Idan-Ha Drive In Theatre, Soda Springs ID.