Apr. 23: Denver Mart Drive In, Denver CO

It’s Day 113 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took another 2 1/2 hours of mostly US 285 mountain driving, from Buena Vista through the actual South Park (a region, not a town) up to Denver, home of the Denver Mart Drive In.

The Denver Mart Drive-In is one of the very latest, opened in May 2015. That first season, it was open seven days a week, but this year it’ll only show movies Fridays through Sundays, Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day.

This is another example of a mixed-use situation that works well for a drive-in. As its web site points out, “The Denver Mart is an event facility by day and a Drive-In by night. Gates open at 7 pm. NO early admittance.” The building, which used to be called the Denver Merchandise Mart, opened in 1965. It hosts a lot of selling “shows,” such as the Rocky Mountain Gift and Apparel Show earlier this year. I’m sure glad that someone there noticed its acres of parking lot and had the imagination to add a profitable drive-in.

The snack bar offers the standard fare – chicken fingers, hot dogs, nachos, pickles and popcorn. Beginning in 2016, they started selling beer and wine inside a Plaza building next to the lot, although it has to be consumed there and not in the drive-in.

Although this was a Sunday night, the Denver Mart is still a month away from opening for the season. That just gave me more time to spend at home (see below).

Miles Today / Total:  129 / 12436 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 52

Nearby Restaurant: The closest good non-chain restaurant to the Denver Mart is just a block away. The Red Rooster Cafe serves up a fine assortment of dishes for breakfast and lunch. Blueberry pancakes are one of my favorite food groups any time of day, the burgers and Mexican food come in huge proportions, and the prices are great.

Where I Virtually Stayed: I live in Denver, so I stayed home. These are going to be the only two nights this year that I get to sleep in my own bed, and I’m not passing up that chance. But the Comfort Inn Central is almost adjacent to the Denver Mart, so that would have been my second choice.

Only in Denver: One of the oldest continuously operating businesses in Colorado is the Buckhorn Exchange, a restaurant and bar across from a former railroad yard. Hundreds of taxidermied animal heads line the walls, and dozens of exotic meats fill the menu. The place opened in 1893 and holds the first state license for “Beer, Wine and Spirituous Liquor”. Best of all, it’s adjacent to a light-rail stop, so it’s easy to get back to wherever you’re staying after sampling several of the Exchange’s exotic drinks.

Next stop: 88 Drive In Theatre, Commerce City CO.

Apr. 22: Comanche Drive In Theatre, Buena Vista CO

It’s Day 112 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took 2 1/2 hours of mostly mountain driving (good thing I’m used to it by now) to journey from Pueblo to the Comanche Drive In Theatre just west of Buena Vista CO.

I often think of the Comanche as a “stealth” drive-in. The Comanche was built in 1966 by John and Pearl Groy, and had its first full season in 1967, but it wasn’t in the 1969 edition of the International Motion Picture Almanac. When I first cataloged active Colorado drive-ins over 20 years ago, none of the other primitive online lists included the Comanche. At my day job, a coworker asked me if I had mentioned the drive-in near his parents’ house in Buena Vista. Long story short, I added the Comanche, bringing the number of active drive-ins in Colorado in 1998 to an even dozen.

Five from that list have closed since then (Durango’s Rocket, Sterling’s Starlite, Englewood’s Cinderella, Springfield’s Kar Vu, and Fort Morgan’s Valley). For a while the Comanche looked like it was gone too. Never the model of high-tech efficiency, it operated erratically in 2007 then closed in 2008. But by 2013 it had reopened, and it has continued an eclectic mix of first-run and classic films every summer since.

At almost 8000 feet, the Comanche is probably the highest drive-in in the US. It’s about 100 feet higher than Minturn, home of the Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive In. I’ll visit Minturn just a few days from now.

The Comanche is scheduled to open for the 2017 season in May (usually late May), so even though it was a Saturday night, I was left to watching TV in my hotel room.

Miles Today / Total:  131 / 12307 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 52

Nearby Restaurant: There are a surprising number of restaurants in little Buena Vista, testament to the hordes of Arkansas River rafters who visit every summer. For a healthy meal, the best choice might be the House Rock Kitchen. It features plenty of adventurous options, and I liked the house bowl with greens, slaw, and pumpkin seeds supporting tender pulled pork.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Once again, the Super 8 in town makes a great choice. The room was clean and comfortable, and the breakfast included waffles and hard-boiled eggs, giving me a better start than some other Super 8s. I also felt kind of lucky; during the summer, it’s almost impossible to get a Saturday reservation here.

Only in Buena Vista: The Comanche may be the highest drive-in, but just up the road is Leadville, the certified highest city in the US. It’s over 10,000 feet high, or what would be over half of the way up Pikes Peak. There’s a fine little mining museum in town as well as what’s left of Baby Doe Tabor’s Matchless Mine. And a lot of pauses to catch your breath.

Next stop: Denver Mart Drive In, Denver CO.

Apr. 21: Mesa Drive-In, Pueblo CO

It’s Day 111 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was a long drive, about 4 1/2 hours, all along US 50 from the South Drive-In Theatre in Dodge City KS to the Mesa Drive-In in Pueblo CO.

The Mesa opened as a single-screen drive-in in 1951. Chuck and Marianne James bought it in 1994, then added two screens to celebrate its 50th year.

When the Mesa added two screens in 2000, it took the unusual tactic of buying them used. Two other Colorado drive-ins had recently closed, the Lake Estes in Estes Park and the Pines in Loveland, but their screens live on in Pueblo.

The Pueblo Chieftain ran a fine article on the Mesa just a few weeks ago, focusing largely on manager Mark Lovato and the nuts and bolts of operating the place. Important, mundane stuff like the dozens of cases of food needed every weekend. “We went through 20 cases of hamburgers and I had to buy 48 extra (burgers) for (Sunday),” Lovato said. “We went through 250 pounds of popcorn in two days.”

There’s a reason they go through so many hamburgers – they’re that good, and a lot of repeat customers (like me) know about them. I was so glad to be back here to enjoy one with a choice of movies even though I’d seen all three already. At least it was only my second dance with Beauty and the Beast.

Miles Today / Total:  270 / 12176 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Beauty and the Beast / 52

Nearby Restaurant: There used to be a hole-in-the-wall pizza joint in the little strip mall adjacent to the Mesa marquee. Now there’s a hole-in-the-wall Chinese food joint, the Pueblo Dragon. If you’re sick of superb hamburgers, or if the Mesa’s closed, the Dragon’s a decent enough place for take out.

Where I Virtually Stayed: More than most chains, Quality Inns have a wide range of quality in my experience. Fortunately, the Quality Inn & Suites Pueblo is one of the good ones. Fresh cookies and coffee in the lobby, a clean, comfortable room, and enough breakfast to continue through Colorado.

Only in Pueblo: Pueblo recently had what the Guinness Book of World Records recognized as the world’s longest painting. The levee mural project stretched three miles along the Arkansas River. It started as basic flood control, got tagged by graffiti, then was painted at night by Colorado State-Pueblo students. But by 2014, the levee was starting to buckle, and in 2016 it was rebuilt without the mural.

Next stop: Comanche Drive In Theatre, Buena Vista CO.