Recently, our friend PPP had some
problems encountering a Southern California traffic jam. He wrote about it in the post here.
But his discussion of it only took up a single paragraph of his blog
post.
Just the other day, I drove from my L.A.
home to Vegas and also encountered traffic difficulties. But I will get an entire Rob-sized blog post
out of it. Because I'm just that good. Note: If you wanted me to end that last
sentence with the word "verbose," please let me know when you get a
horse and I will be happy to give you and the horse you rode in on a proper
greeting.
Of course, because it is me, I have to
make not one but two digressions in order to properly tell this story. So, as usual, you will have to indulge me.
The first digression involves the fast
food hamburger chain, In-N-Out Burger. I
believe most of the In-N-Out locations are located in the West Coast, and it
has developed a cult-like following. Those who prefer their burgers to other
fast food chains are almost like religious fanatics in their belief that their
burgers are far superior to anyone else's.
It would be fair to compare it to the cult of Apple—you know how
annoying people who worship at the foot of Apple products are, right? In-N-Out cultists are like that.
I was never part of the cult. I didn't find their burgers appreciable
better than most of their competitors.
Now back in the day, I used to eat a lot of fast food crap, but as I've
gotten older I've tried to eat better and I indulge much less frequently.
But sometime last year, I was treated
to an In-N-Out Burger by a member of the cult, our pal Lightning. He is denied access to In-N-Out in his own
neighborhood in Illinois, and it is a tradition for him to pay a visit to the
In-N-Out on Tropicana, just down the road from the MGM Hotel, each time he
comes to Vegas. On this particular
visit, he treated both Nick and
I to this fine cuisine, and I had to admit that it was a lot better than I
remembered it. It might be because it
had been so long since I had had a fast food burger, or it might have been
because I didn't pay for it—that always helps.
But I did find it rather tasty. I
don't think I ever blogged about this meal, however, probably because I
couldn't figure out a way to get boobies into the story.
Flash forward to this year, when I
started playing poker at the Player's Casino in Ventura. Somehow, I started noticing that, on my most
"normal" route to PC from my home, I was actually passing no less than
six In-N-Out Burger joints. This struck
me as odd because there are lot less of them than there are McDonald's or
Burger Kings. Or even Jacks-in-the-Box. I found it unusual that there were so many
that I passed getting to my poker session.
And so I started eating there for my
pre-poker session lunch. Because having
a fast food burger in your belly seems appropriate for an afternoon of
poker. It's a relatively harmless
indulgence since I don't play poker that often when I'm home. If I tried this before every Vegas poker
session, I'd probably be dead by now.
Anyway, I mentioned this new
"tradition" to my pals LM and Woody, mostly because I found it so odd
that I drove by so many of this particular burger chain (one of which is in
their neighborhood) going to play poker.
And then I didn't think much of it.
But as I alerted LM and Woody to the
fact that I was leaving for Vegas the next day, Woody made a bold
prediction. He predicted that I would
stop at the In-N-Out Burger located midway between L.A. and Vegas for a burger
on the way up.
To explain why this was so absurd, I
have to take the second digression. For those
of you who have never driven from L.A. to Vegas (or vice-versa), let me
describe the drive for you. Now it takes
me about an hour from my home of driving east to get on the I-15. That's the freeway you see that is just west
of the Strip when you're in Vegas. In
fact, as you are driving thru Vegas on it, you can see the In-N-Out Burger on
Tropicana, but that is a totally needless digression.
Once you get on I-15 in Southern
California. You are pretty much in the middle of nowhere. There are some really small towns you go
thru, but it's a lot of dirt and vacant land and some mountains in the near
distance. There are three
"cities" that you drive thru before you cross into that state where
you can legally gamble on pretty much everything but Daily Fantasy Sports.
First you come to Victorville, which
is noteworthy for absolutely no reason whatsoever. Then you come to Barstow, which I always say,
is a city that exists for the sole purpose of being midway between L.A. and
Vegas. And then there is Baker, noteworthy for a big sign that says
"Gateway to Death." Actually, what
it really says is "Gateway to Death Valley." If you ever want to visit Death Valley, Baker
is your way there. Baker also is home to
"The World's Tallest Thermometer."
Or as all my friends refer to it, "The World's Largest Rectal
Thermometer." Of the
three, Baker is the smallest—basically it's two miles of one street with a lot
of fast food joints and gas stations—Barstow is the biggest, almost worthy of
being called a real city—and Victorville is somewhere in between.
And south of Barstow, there is a huge mall
with a collection of outlet stores, which also has a bunch of gas stations and
pretty much every fast food you can name—including In-N-Out Burger. I believe that this is the only In-N-Out
Burger on the I-15 until you get to the one in Vegas on Tropicana.
Now, I've made that trip from L.A. to
Vegas more times than I care to count.
In the old, old days, when I had a regular 9-5 job and would only go for
a few days at a time, I'd leave L.A. real early, like 7-7:30AM. That was easy as I was used to setting the
alarm before 6AM—sometimes as early as 3:45AM.
But now I set my own hours, and my own hours don't get me started
anywhere near that early. So it's much
more likely that I get on the road between 8:30 & 9:30 AM.
Since this is a four-hour or so drive,
that gets me in town soon enough to hold off on having lunch until I arrive in
Vegas, where I have many preferable choices to just a fast food burger. Except for a few times when I left L.A. in
the afternoon or evening (due to work obligations), I have almost never stopped
for food on the trip up. I can recall a
couple of exceptions, once when I slept really late and got a late start, and
once or twice when I encountered traffic problems delaying my arrival.
So when Woody predicted that I would
be stopping at the one just south of Barstow (presumably because of this new
"tradition" of hitting an In-N-Out Burger before poker), I told him
that was ridiculous. I said that I hoped
to be passing by that location before 11AM, and why the heck would I have a
hamburger that early in the day when there were so many better options just two
hours away? I even said that if I
actually did stop at that In-N-Out Burger for a meal, it would mean something
had gone horribly wrong, and I would be really, really pissed.
So I left for Vegas the next morning,
more-or-less the time I had anticipated.
I was making good time. All was
well. Now of course, although I don't
stop for food, I do have to make the occasional pit stop during this trip to
answer nature's call. I know all the "good" places to stop, as my
bladder dictates. And the older I get, the more likely it has become that I
will have to make a stop—or two—or three—along the way. When I drive up, I always have a cooler full
of Diet Mountain Dew at my side to quench my thirst and to make sure I have
enough caffeine to keep me awake during the drive. This of course adds to the likelihood of
multiple pit stops.
Anyway, I had been on the road for a
couple of hours and was on schedule. I was
approaching Barstow and assessed whether I needed to make a stop at that outlet
mall to unload the Diet Mountain Dew. I
felt like I did not need to stop. I did feel
like I would not be able to make it all the way to Baker without stopping, but
there is a great place just north of Barstow where you can get off and back on
the freeway really easily and use the Jack-in-the-Box there for the only thing
it is good for—taking a piss. Traffic
had been light and moving very well, it would be another 10-15 minutes until I
got to that Jack-in-the-Box. Getting off
to pee at the Outlet Mall would take much more time, as it is heavily
trafficked. The place north of Barstow
was a much better option if all you need to do was use a urinal.
So no stop at the Outlet Mall. Next stop, the aforementioned
Jack-in-the-Box. And I would say I was
no more than a minute or two past the exit for the Outlet Mall when I noticed
red lights up ahead, and all of a sudden traffic came to a complete and total
stop. Uh Oh.
After the complete stop, traffic
started moving again. At the brisk pace of approximately 10 feet every
minute. Or less. Yikes.
Now, of course, I would have been unhappy with the traffic being so bad
under any circumstances—after all, this was Vegas the traffic was delaying me
getting to. But seeing as how I had
skipped the rest stop less than a mile behind me and was now stuck in one hell
of a fustercluck of a traffic jam, I was incredibly outraged. I managed to find out from the traffic
station on the radio that they had closed two lanes (out of three) up ahead for
repaving And they said that the jam up
would continue until well past the intersection for I-40, which I figured to be
a long, long distance from where I was stuck, especially at the pace I was
travelling. Furthermore, the next off
ramp ahead was for a state highway that they said was partially closed due to
mudslides the week earlier. I wasn't
sure if that meant the ramp to it from the I-15 was closed or not, but even if
it wasn't, getting on the ramp to a road that was closed didn't seem like a
good option for me.
I didn't have any good options. I was stuck in the middle lane and couldn't
have gotten off the freeway—or to the side of the freeway—if I wanted to. But as soon as that traffic jam started,
suddenly the urge to pee changed from just mild to "get the f*** to a
Men's Room this second."
It might have been psychological. You know, just knowing that it was going to
be awhile before I could get relief made it 1000 times worse than it really
was. But I have to say, for the next
hour—yes hour—I kept looking over to the side of the road, when I could see it,
and was seriously considering just pulling off to the shoulder and peeing right
there on the side of the road.
Alternatively, I was looking at the empty cans of Diet Mountain Dew I
had. I was really strongly considering
taking my sunshield, covering myself with it, and peeing into one of those cans
as I moved forward at a foot a minute. I
was really, really getting desperate.
I was really dying, it was one of the
most uncomfortable situations I could remember being in. I was in total agony, to be honest. Meanwhile, the traffic from the lane to my
left started merging into my line as that lane was closed ahead. The real reason for this being an especially
bad traffic jam was that on the right side, after there was traffic merging on
from that state highway, the right lane closed as well—this was just a natural
gore point of the freeway design. So at
the point of the normal gore point, reducing the freeway from four lanes to
three, you had two lanes on the left closing and merging into the one remaining
lane for the repaving project. You couldn't
pick a worse place to do this. I want
the designer of this project brought up on charges of treason, at the very
least.
I was still south of Barstow proper,
there was only one lane of traffic, and still not moving, and I was still
dying. Face it, we've all been there,
having to really, really having to go. At least I was on the right side of the
road, and I could pull off to the shoulder if I had to do. Was I really ready to pee with an audience
(and also be committing a crime, I'm sure, public urination). I was just hoping that there'd be an exit and
I could escape and find any place to go.
Suddenly, I saw a sign for an exit, and there was actually an "exit
only" lane for it, and there was no traffic in that lane. I got in that lane and saw it was for
"Avenue L" which was south of the main part of Barstow. I had never
taken that exit before, but it looked like an Oasis to me. I took my opportunity and the exit. It was
the first time I had gone more than 5 miles an hour in the past 50
minutes. As I climbed the off ramp, I
saw a big sign for a Home Depot to the left.
Great. A Home Depot will have
public restrooms.
And there was another thought as
well. It was now past Noon, and my
thought of waiting until I got to Vegas to eat lunch was pretty much shot. I figured when I returned to the freeway, it
would be jammed for awhile and who knew when I would get to Vegas. Up until the traffic jam, i had been debating
in my mind which one of two places I would hit for lunch when I got to
Vegas. But now I realized that it made
more sense to eat in Barstow and forego a better meal in Vegas.
So I was kind of hoping that the Home
Depot was in a bigger shopping center that had some fast food options and I
could kill two birds with one stone. And
I have to admit that, if I hadn't seen that Home Depot sign, I think I would
have just pulled off the road at that exit and just whipped it out right there,
I was that desperate. The area was
pretty desolate, nothing really around there.
But I thought I could make it to the
Home Depot, if barely. And so....I
proceeded to drive right past it!
Seriously, from the road it looked like the entrance to it was actually
the freeway onramp to the I-15 south, pretty much the last thing I wanted to do
was get back on the freeway! So I blew
by the Home Depot and eventually came to a traffic signal. I noticed that the street I had come to was
Main Street and there was a sign that said "Barstow" that pointed
right. However, I was in the left lane,
hoping to make a U-turn. When I saw a
"No U-turn" sign, I thought I would turn left and see if there was a
fast food joint down the road I could stop at instead (such a law-abiding
citizen!). But it was mostly nothing
except a few industrial/construction type places, machine shops and the like,
nothing that would have a public restroom and no fast food.
I double backed and this time I found
the entrance to the Home Depot. There
was nothing else there, no fast food, no gas station, just the Home Depot in
the middle of nowhere. But if it had a
working Men's Room, it would be like Shrangri-La to me. I parked the car and pretty much ran to the
entrance. Just then, my cell phone rang.
I looked to see it who it was. It
was my pal Woody. WTF? Why was he calling me? He knew I was driving to Vegas so why was he
calling me? I sent it to voicemail as I
was in no condition to have a conversation.
There was greeter at the entrance.
"Welcome to Home Depot." My
only response was, "Where's the Men's Room." She pointed me in the right direction and saw
the most beautiful urinal I'd ever seen in my life. Phew.
However, to add insult to injury, after washing my hands, I saw that
they were out of paper towels. No hand
drier either. I was stuck shaking my
hands dry as I walked back to my car.
I then listened to Woody's
message. It started with, "Oh, I just remembered, you're driving
to Vegas. You're probably at the
In-N-Out in Barstow having a burger right now..." He went on to ask me about an Air
Conditioning repair I recently had. But
WTF? I mean seriously, WTF? He calls me just as I was about to get the
desperate relief I needed, and after I had already decided that I was indeed
going to have fast food (most likely a burger) in Barstow?
And then I realized his
"prophecy" was indeed coming true—well, almost true. I wasn't going back to the In-N-Out, but I
was gonna be having a burger in Barstow.
And after I told him I would be really pissed if I had to do that, and
there he was making jokes about it on my voice mail! And then I of course realized that this
entire nightmare was all his fault. His joking prediction that I would be doing
In-N-Out in Barstow had totally jinxed the drive up, and that was the reason
for my driving nightmare.
It's just like in poker when some player
not involved in a hand calls for a card that would change the result of an
all-in and thus makes it inevitable that that card hits (see here).
That guy calling for the 9 to screw me over was just like Woody calling
for me to eat a fast food burger in Barstow that day. Totally his fault.
I mean, I can't explain it logically,
but come one, every superstitious poker player (and is there any other kind?),
knows it's true.
Anyway, I was not in a good mood,
despite my relief. I decided to drive
back to Main Street, drive thru Barstow, and find a fast food place to
eat. I started recognizing the road and
realized I would be coming to "Main Street Station" in Barstow, home
of what was once the world's busiest McDonald's (I think that designation now
belongs to one in Russia or China). But
across the street from that I knew there'd be a Burger King, which I prefer
(and is also easier to get in and out of).
I did indeed find that Burger King, and had a double whopper (no cheese)
and a salad.
The good news was that getting back on
the I-15 there, the traffic was gone. I
had somehow gone around the rest of the big jam-up and when I got back on the
freeway, it was clear sailing the rest of the way. But with all the delays, what should have
been a 4-hour drive to Vegas became a 6-hour drive to Vegas, and boy was I
pissed.
In and Out on Tropicana is usually busier than a BOGOF at a boudoir after closing time. The one on Sahara is usually empty (but out the way). There is also one on Maryland, but I've never been in it. When down that way I always go to Jolibee for Yum Burgers. Yum !
ReplyDeleteSo ends Mr Ben's guide to fast food joints in Vegas.
Thanks, Ben, but this language barrier is killing me. I think I figured out that BOGOF is "Buy one, get one free"? Is that right.
DeleteAnd what is Jolibee? Is that the name of the place and the burgers are Yum? Or is that a street where Yum Burgers is located?
Man, I just wish English was your native language.
Rob, Jollibee is a chain of fast food restaurants that started up in the Philippines but has since opened up locations here in the US. There's a few here in my stretch of the woods near Long Beach, including one in Cerritos. The Filipino concept of a fast food menu seems basically to be a combination of McD's, KFC and neighborhood Italian eatery, all in one restaurant, on steroids.
DeleteThere's also locations in the Cerritos/Artesia area of a very popular Phillippines-based fast food bakery called Goldilocks.
Thanks, Steve, I had no idea. I never heard of it and had no idea there was even such a thing as Filipino fast food.
DeleteRob - you may want to buy a product called "Travel Johnny." It can be used to answer the call of nature in your car when in the kind of situation you related here. The travel johnny container has in it some kind of product that turns pee into an odorless, solid gel. So, after relieving yourself in it, in just a few minutes, it turns completely solid and won't leak out.
ReplyDeleteHere's a link to the product on Amazon .... http://www.amazon.com/Travel-John-66911-TravelJohn-Disposable-Urinal/dp/B000NV878S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1445917490&sr=8-1&keywords=travel+johnny
Oh my gosh, Cranky, I had no idea such a thing existed, thanks so much for bringing this to my attention.
DeleteObviously the misery I suffered on this trip was rather rare, really never experienced anything quite like it, but I suppose it would certainly be a good idea to have something like this handy any time I'm taking a long drive.
Come to think of it, living in L.A., I never know when a 5 minute ride could turn into a 2 hour hellride, so probably best to have it with me at all times!
Thanks again.
Rob, can definitely relate. Been there, done that, got the yellow-stained T-shirt. Ick.
ReplyDeleteWill try to tell the story quickly, but way back in the late 1990s/early 2000s I was working for a bankruptcy law firm delivering petitions to the court in a really seedy section of downtown LA. Anyway, there was one time I had to go but figured I could wait 'til I got back to work. Then I started walking to the dirty, congested parking garage where my car was parked, so I could head back to the office... when I realized I couldn't wait much longer to go.
So I dove into the Mobil station next door to the parking garage... and "dive" is an understatement. This men's room was where heroin addicts go to die. I got the key, unlocked the door and was treated to a restroom with next to *no* working lighting, a wet floor covered in... something... that I hoped were paper towels and toilet paper, and I could barely even see the toilet I was using, or the sink to wash my hands. I still have nightmares about the five minutes I spent there. Triple yick.
Ugh, that sounds really awful. I've been in a few gas station Men's Room and some of them are rather hellish to be sure.
DeleteI'm sure you felt the need to clean the bottom of your shoes after.
I stop at In N Out Burger sometimes in Hesperia, just west of Sphincterville ( what some friends call Victorville ) and right off I-15. But I usually try to do LA trips with no food stop if possible. Double-Double is delicious, but I prefer my food coma to occur near home, not with hours to drive.
ReplyDeleteHmm....is that In-N-Out on Main Street in Hesperia? If so, I forgot about that one. Now that you mention it, I think there is one there just off the I-15. I sometimes stop at that exit (usually on the way home) for a bathroom break at the Jacques-in-the-Box, never to eat. Is there an In-N-Out across the street from Clown food place?
DeleteBIG NEWS...in addition to the one in Hesperia that Norm reminded me of, there's actually ONE MORE In-N-Out on the I-15 on the way to/from Vegas. It's north of Victorville on Roy Rogers Drive, of all things.
DeleteI hope this add on is good enough...I should probably do a whole new blog post with this earth shattering news. But I want to mention it to preserve the editorial integrity of the blog.
There was only one road back to L.A., U.S. interstate 15. Just a flat-out high speed burn through Baker, and Barstow, and Berdoo. Then on to the Hollywood freeway straight into frantic oblivion. Safety... obscurity... just another freak in the freak kingdom.
ReplyDelete