Aug. 31: Mustang Drive-In, Picton ON

It’s Day 243 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, (I’m 2/3 of the way through!), and my 18th in Ontario. It took an hour and a quarter to drive from Havelock to the Mustang Drive-In, a few miles west of Picton.

The Mustang opened as the Picton Drive-In in April 1956. It changed its name to the Mustang around 1970, give or take a year or two. It was a single screen with room for about 350 cars.

The modern story of the Mustang is the story of Paul Peterson. As detailed in a wonderful, long article in the National Post, Peterson was working as a counsellor for young offenders and youth in crisis. While driving with his wife in the summer of 1988, took a shortcut. The couple saw the neglected drive-in – “the word ‘abandoned’ would be appropriate,” he said while telling this story – and noticed it was for sale. Peterson pulled over and said to his wife, “Wow, that’d be cool, let’s buy it.”

Peterson said he knew nothing about running a drive-in, and he had a lot of work to do. He had to spruce up the place physically, and he had to change its clientele. “The drive-in Paul inherited, to hear him tell it, was a regular Gomorrah.” After seeing the problem for himself, he took out an ad in the Picton Gazette stating, “The Mustang Drive-In now has a zero tolerance policy for alcohol.” The throng of partiers left, and after a good while, families began to return a few at a time.

The Mustang added a second screen in 2004 and digital projectors around 2015. “We’re digital now,” Peterson told the Toronto Star that year. “That’s changed. That means we’re poor. But really, it’s the same. Lots of fun.”

It takes a character to build a drive-in of character. Based on recent photos, they added the Mustang name to the screen tower less than 10 years ago. The ticket booth is a repurposed city bus. And there’s the honking ritual. As the Post put it, one night Peterson “stood in front of a lot full of cars with a microphone in his hand and said, ‘Look, you’re going to honk at me anyway, so you might as well do it now.’ The place erupted like a wedding convoy. ‘They did it and they loved it,’ Paul told me. ‘Every night since then we’ve honked. It was kismet.’”

Miles Today / Total: 60 / 28207 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Nut Job 2 / 157

Nearby Restaurant: Unlike me, the Crepe Escape spells the name of that delicate pastry with a circumflex over the first e. That attention to detail illustrates how serious these folks are to dishing it up right. I enjoyed a ham and cheese crepe for lunch, followed by a chocolate and blueberries crepe for dessert. I saved some of it to nibble on while I watched the movie.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Picton is the kind of place with historic lodging reflecting its long history. I’m not sure how long the Picton Harbour Inn has been around, but it’s being nicely renovated and offers a price closer to my budget for this odyssey. My top-floor queen room had a comfy bed and good wifi, plus a great view of the harbor.

Only in Picton: In the middle of Picton, halfway between a Dollar Store and a Tim Hortons, is the Un Gallery, a store with “Affordable Art that everyone can enjoy!” It offers paintings, jewelry, sculpture, and lots of other stuff, mostly from eastern Canadian artists. The selection changes often, but it’s always eccentric, quirky and fun.

Next stop: Kingston Family FunWorld, Kingston ON.

Aug. 30: Havelock Family Drive-In, Havelock ON

Cars in front of a drive-in screen after sunset

Photo from the Havelock Family Drive-In Facebook page

It’s Day 242 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my 17th in Ontario. I finally found a diagonal highway, cutting a good 10 minutes off an otherwise hour’s drive from the Port Hope Drive In, just east of Port Hope of course, to the Havelock Family Drive-In just west of Havelock of course.

Gord Henderson works full time for a concert hall in Toronto, but he found time to build and open the Havelock in 2011. He told the Trent Hills Independent that he’s wanted to open a drive-in ever since he was a teenager. “Life was getting in the way and eventually you’ve got to put the pieces together and here it is,” Henderson said. “I always felt that when you went to the drive-in it was a good feeling and when you left it was a good feeling. I thought if I’m going to do a job in my later years that’s where I want to be.”

The Havelock is an odd little drive-in, with room for just 75 cars but a large concession stand / projection / restroom building. Years after it opened, it still didn’t have any real marquee or other signage, but reviews on Facebook praise its spirit and cleanliness. One really great idea is mosquito screen rentals; I created my own with screen fabric and a magnet collection, but it’s nice to have it already available.

The Peterborough Examiner caught up with Henderson at the end of his second season, and he said he was still having the time of his life. He said he calls his approach “the four wows” of the big screen, FM stereo sound, that cleanliness, and the food. The staff will deliver pizzas to cars, and there are burger, hot dogs, and the other usual suspects available.

In June 2015, it was Peterborough This Week‘s turn to drop in on the Havelock. Henderson had upgraded to a digital projector and was looking forward to a season of better movies and better weather than 2014.

When Henderson retires from his full-time job, he’ll continue to run the Havelock, he told This Week. For now, it’s a way to recharge his batteries from work. “Some people go fishing, some people golf and I go to the drive-in,” he said. “The plan is to do this until I can’t see the screen anymore.”

Miles Today / Total: 40 / 28147 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Hitman’s Bodyguard / 156

Nearby Restaurant: The Havelock Garden Restaurant is another quirky little place. Its specialty is Chinese, but it also offers “Canadian food” such as burgers, grilled cheese sandwiches, and French fries with gravy. I stuck with the house specialties, and was just a little sad that I wasn’t here for the weekend buffet.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The place to stay in Havelock is the Moonlight Motel just east of town on the Trans-Canada Highway. It’s another one of those well-maintained mom and pop kind of motels, set back from the road with trees and flowers in the front yard. My clean little room had a mini-fridge and microwave along with solid wifi. As far as breakfast and coffee go, any town with a Tim Hortons is a town where I’ll be just fine in the morning.

Only in Havelock: South of town in Campbellford, there’s an 18-foot wide toonie coin mounted eight feet off the ground. The monument honors Campbellford artist Brent Townsend, who created the polar bear image in its center.

Next stop: Mustang Drive-In, Picton ON.

Aug. 29: Port Hope Drive In, Cobourg ON

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnbzAKe7JjQ

It’s Day 241 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my 16th in Ontario. Driving straight towards Lake Ontario, it took me an hour to drive from the community of Lindsay to the Port Hope Drive In, just west of Cobourg.

The Port Hope is about halfway between Cobourg and Port Hope, which explains why it began as the Midway Drive-In. Although some articles say it opened in 1952, others say it was 1947 and that it’s one of the oldest continuously operated drive-ins in Canada. In the early 50s, its owner was “Northumberland Drive-In,” and it could hold 500 cars. By 1959, Premier Theatres had moved in.

According to an article saved by Port Hope History, in January 1986 Premier sold the Midway and two indoor theaters to three men who lived in Seattle. Movie-Theatre.org listed the drive-in’s owners as A & M Sacco in 1990.

Then there’s some confusion about what this drive-in was called, and when. (I think the main problem was a lack of permanent signage. Old and new photos show the name only on letter boards.) Possibly it was the Saccos who later renamed it the Century Drive-In, as listed by DriveInTheater.com circa 2001. At some point before 2008, it was renamed the Port Hope, as shown by its Archive.org-preserved web site. But when a McGill University grad student visited in 2013, a Northumberland Today writer called it the Midway Drive-In.

The YouTube video of the day is a type I haven’t seen before. It’s a book trailer for a novel set at the Port Hope, or some similar drive-in. At least I think that’s what’s going on; I haven’t read the book, called Sorry, Celeste.

The snack of the night was “prings,” onion rings made like a poutine. The movie was Annabelle: Creation, the kind of scary film that works well at a drive-in even though it’s not my favorite genre.

Miles Today / Total: 46 / 28107 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Annabelle: Creation / 155

Nearby Restaurant: Once again my search for schnitzel was rewarded by a visit to the Matterhorn Restaurant. I got to experience a Gordon blue chicken schnitzel stuffed with ham and Swiss cheese. (I’d call it a cordon bleu, so it must have been a pun I didn’t recognize.) Add an apple strudel for dessert, and I was set for the rest of the day.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The Best Western Plus Cobourg Inn was probably the best place to stay in Cobourg. My room had a refrigerator and wifi, my two essentials, and the hotel was close enough to a Tim Hortons that I didn’t need to buy the breakfast on site. It got me on the road that much sooner.

Only in Cobourg: Victoria Hall was opened in 1860 by the Prince of Wales. It was restored in 1983, and its second-floor concert hall holds plays and musical performances in an intimate setting. It’s a big, beautiful old building, and it’s nice to see it back to its original splendor.

Next stop: Havelock Family Drive-In, Havelock ON.