Lolly's Killer Curves -
But for every tragedy, there are a hundred triumphs. On any given Saturday morning, you’ll hear the sound of engines warming up at the Lolly’s Gas & Grub—a one-pump station that sells better brisket than anywhere in three counties. Drivers gather there before dawn. They sip bad coffee, trade tire-pressure tips, and watch the fog lift off the mountain.
Cruz teaches a weekend course called “Curve Therapy,” aimed at drivers who’ve been humbled by the pass. Students range from teenage thrill-seekers to retirees who bought Porsches for their midlife crises. All of them arrive with the same expression: bruised ego, slight tremor in the hands. lolly's killer curves
“They thought they knew how to drive,” Cruz says with a smile. “Lolly proves otherwise.” Not everyone survives the lesson. The local volunteer fire department has a nickname for the ravine: “The Taker.” Wrecks happen about once a month, though only a handful make the news. Most are single-vehicle accidents—a Mustang that entered a 25-mph turn at 60, a pickup truck that misjudged the decreasing radius of “The Corkscrew,” a tourist in an RV who tried to take the hairpin wide. But for every tragedy, there are a hundred triumphs