An infusion of hostile drivers in Cayucos

July 16, 2023

Editor’s Note: The following series, “Life in Radically Gentrifying Cayucos by the Sea,” to be posted biweekly includes the notes, thoughts, and opinions of an original American voice: author Dell Franklin. 

Franklin’s memoir, “Life On The Mississippi, 1969,” is currently on Amazon.

By DELL FRANKLIN

I turned off the main drag onto possibly the widest side street in town on the way home in my 21-year-old jalopy, was prepared to turn left when I spotted Harland (Hazel) and her dog and a lady friend with a cane walking toward me, headed for the beach. Instead of turning left, I pulled up in the middle of the street as Harland waved me down like a vivacious high school girl.

She introduced me to her friend and we began catching up. Harland was playing in a band at Schooner’s Wharf on the coming Saturday. The subject became music. A small white car coming toward us hesitated, and passed on my side of the street when the driver realized there was plenty of passing room on both sides.

Another passed us from behind. Then a big black pickup halted a few yards before us and refused to budge. Harland and her friend stood closer to my car and waved the driver on, a man in ball cap. He refused to move. So the girls and dog walked around behind my car and the driver accelerated past us with a scowl.

We resumed our conversation. Two more cars hesitated, both passing on either side, the drivers nodding at us in a friendly manner, and then a sleek low-slung black car headed toward us and stopped. The girls waved the driver on. A man with a buzz cut. He wouldn’t budge. He appeared agitated. I stuck my left hand out the window and motioned for him to pass. He wouldn’t budge. We continued talking. Still, he wouldn’t budge and it was obvious now that he was going to force the girls to comply and insist on getting his way. Or maybe he wanted me to move. I wasn’t.

I urged the girls to stay put, but finally they moved to the back of the car and the driver zoomed past us, scowling, and Harland’s friend said, “That is an unhappy camper.”

Cayucos is and has always been a small beach town with a serene vibe and snail’s pace. When my mother was alive and visited, she described Cayucos as a “giant tranquilizer that instantly infuses you.” Right now it’s summer, so it’s busy, yes, but where does this hostility come from when locals wish to stop time and visit in the streets? Especially on an off-the-grid street?

Back in the early 1990s, when we had a hardware store where the giant antique emporium now sits, I recall big dusty pickup trucks halted on the main drag in opposite directions, drivers facing each other and visiting. People drove past them, usually waving or beeping. Sometimes somebody pulled over and joined them. We all did this. We all recognized each others’ cars, especially since in those days a lot of us drove dated dirty heaps, like the Pirate (stone mason Randy Crosier), who tossed biscuits at local dogs who went into gyrations upon hearing his groaning truck blocks away.

Of course, those were the days when most of the carpenters and house painters and plumbers and electricians and gardeners and general laborers could afford to live in town, and lollygagged on the streets and parking lots and drank in the tavern, which now sits empty.

Those who employed these people were seldom demanding or entitled or too wealthy or stressed by deadlines and jangled with impatience. Nobody was in a hurry.

You’re not supposed to be in a hurry in Cayucos. You’re supposed to be very, very, very patient and pleasant and considerate and understanding and not controlled by an obsession to control the environment and insist that those around you comply with your fucking demands!

Such people upset the standing attitude of small town tranquility that has existed for over a century and, personally, leaves a bad taste in your mouth.

When I mentioned this, Harland’s friend shook her head. “Don’t let those hostile people irritate you— the poor things are headed for unhappy lives.”


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I’ve run across the situation described and go around the stopped vehicle. When you saw the first motorist annoyed you should have moved. Stopping in the middle of the street is a violation of the vehicle code and we can’t pick and choose what sections to follow based on nostalgia. Nor can we time travel back to a time when things were more to our liking,


Cars stopped in the middle of a side street with room to pass? Not sure i would call that an issue. The real issue in my opinion, after living here for 30 plus years, is the invasion of golf carts and especially on Pacific and Ocean. I read that a 3 year old in florida was driving a golf cart on his street and killed a 7 year old. Well, thats Florida and safety is not my issue. Its all these “entitled” people that think they can just go whatever speed they want, enjoy the scenery because they are mostly the outside interlopers invade and disrespect our little town. If they just pull over and let cars pass it would ease the situation a bit. However for the most part I have to get close and lay on the horn to get their attention and some action. There is a modicum of satisfaction in this action but its beginning to bore me.


A considerate driver will move to the far right or move on when a car approaches.


Years ago I remember Jingles the Cat flopping in the middle of <redacted> Street in San Luis Obispo. A car came up, paused. Jingles didn’t move. The car inched forward. Jingles didn’t move. The car oh-so-slowly crept forward, straddling Jingles with its tires, and Jingles (who was not exactly a high-powered intellect in the cat world) still didn’t move. The driver carefully drove over Jingles, who remained blissfully unaware of impending doom, and went on his way. This was when Jimmy Carter was President. Jingles acted like nothing was wrong. Times have changed, Dell.


There are hostile drivers everywhere these days… I drive the speed limit in my little town of Morro Bay and people are passing me on the wrong side of the road crossing a double yellow line of Main street… and they act very ticked off… I can only wonder why they came here just to speed by the beautiful views… the tailgating is out of control and people running stop signs… Yep I’ve seen it all… the only thing I don’t see very often are police writing tickets for these offenses….


At least; as they say in Baywood, “slow your roll”. Life is short, road rage is real. People need to slow down metaphorically and literally and “chill out”. Roads aren’t just for cars; and because a bunch of lobbyists screwed us and over developed roads; doesn’t mean we can’t use them as they were intended without cars.


I’m going to back up up here Dale. Stopping in the road is totally a small town thing and was always met with a wave or a join in the conversation. That’s just the way it was. We still do it on our road. Used to do it on the Embarcadero too. I miss those days. The days before McMansions and gated fences.


I hate to state the obvious here but aren’t you the one NOT being “very, very, very patient and pleasant and considerate and understanding and not controlled by an obsession to control the environment and insist that those around you comply with your f***ing demands!

You have your vehicle parked in the middle of the road causing a hazard and despite several other drivers alerting you of the problem you continue to “hold your ground” and stay parked blocking the roadway. For an “off grid” street there seems to be quite a bit of traffic. Some times we need to look at ourselves and not others to determine the problem.


Newcomers never hesitate to tell us how to live.


If I were to have told my parents I got glared at for stopping in the middle of the road to talk to someone, it’s likely I would have been greeted with, “You’re lucky you only got glared at.” I might even have been prompted to go apologize to whomever glared at me, especially if I came off as complaining about getting glared at. In part, this is why I wouldn’t just stop in the middle of the road.


If you find that someone is tailgating you ever single drive you take… you’re the problem.