Davisite Banner. Left side the bicycle obelisk at 3rd and University. Right side the trellis at the entrance to the Arboretum.

Davis Flow

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Photo by Iggie Walsh 

By Michelle Jillian Bailey

As I sit here, in my air-conditioned home, the high will reach 106* today. I am reminded of other hot summer Saturdays of my youth. My summers, ages 10- 12 (that’s too many years ago to attempt the math!), consisted of lessons at Happy Horse Riding School. Happy Horse was located on Road 96 and was the idyllic camp for young horse lovers. It consisted of riding lessons in a covered arena, vaulting lessons (gymnastics on horseback) and even written horse education.

If you are familiar with Davis, you know that Road 96 is way out there. Even today, on Google maps, there is Davis, and then there is a lot of blank lines before you reach Road 96. In fact, it is just shy of six miles from my childhood home. Six miles. In 106*. For a 10-year-old. On a bike. Let that sink in for a minute.

I made this weekly Saturday trek before helmet laws, before water bottles were a thing, and long before Russell Blvd had a usable bike lane. How did I navigate the wild streets of Davis with Russell as a four-lane road? How?! Well, I road down 6th street. Did you audibly gasp? Can you believe I survived to adulthood? Are you looking up the number to CPS to retroactively report my mom?

Road 96

Photo by Iggie Walsh 

I love bikes. I always have. I grew up on a bike. In my before-children days, I paid an obscene amount of money for a titanium bike that weighs less than 15 pounds. There are more bikes in my garage than cars in my driveway. The bike paths in Davis are wonderful, and I have no problem sending my kids off to ride around. However- driving is convenient too.

Is it too much to ask that there is ONE thoroughfare in Davis? On Covell in less than a two mile stretch there are nine, yes, nine, stop lights. NINE! And they are NOT timed! Between my house and my best friend’s house there are eleven lights. Our homes are a little over three miles apart and it takes me nearly fifteen minutes to get to her house. If I go four extra miles out of my way, by taking Road 29, it only adds three minutes to my trip. Now admittedly my friend claims I have bad light karma, however, I have had two instances where I actually caught ALL ELEVEN lights red. Now, I’m not a math major, but I’m thinking those are some pretty wild probabilities! (And, in case you are wondering, I have NEVER caught all eleven green.)

Shasta

Photo by Iggie Walsh 

I’ve been in Davis a long time, since my birth, and one of biggest changes I’ve witnessed is the increased difficulty in driving. Back in my younger days, you could travel down F street between Covell and 1st, and there were only lights at 8th, 5th, and 3rd. Now there are stop signs at every block between 5th and 1st. Stop signs are frustrating. While pedestrians mostly understand and respect stop lights, they are incapable of grasping or complying with the red octagon. We have all slammed on our brakes halfway through the intersection as some pedestrian steps out in front of us. While pedestrians have the right of way in California, they are still required to follow the traffic laws.

There are two things that I would love to see change, making Davis traffic flow far less frustrating. First, I think downtown should be pedestrian only. Approximately 4th and G to 1st and D, should be completely traffic free. Second, there should be both an east/west and a north/south thoroughfare. Two roads in which cars can travel 45 MPH and not have to stop every 1/16 of a mile. This would be similar to 2nd street but go from one end of town to the other. I’m not a city planner, or an engineer. However, I think if someone can figure out how to make Russell more congested and painful to drive (by making it a two-lane road instead of four) then surely someone smarter than me can configure a road to make traffic better.

While we are at it, maybe a third request? Why are the lights from Covell to Denali and Mace to Alhambra protected lefts? Can’t we just have a blinking red left turn? Okay, maybe I’m pushing my luck here!

Covel and FPhoto by Iggie Walsh 

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Comments

5 responses to “Davis Flow”

  1. Pam Helm

    Hey, when I moved here the only traffic light was on B Street. It was in front of the elementary school that once stood approximately where the Farmers Market is now. The second one went in on B between the old High School and Emerson Jr. High, now the City Admin buildings on either side of the street where the pool is. One could actually drive from one end of town to the other and miss all arterial stop signs.

  2. sarah tetcher

    First solution: stop driving and ride your bike. If driving through stoplights is so horrible, then driving ins’t “more convenient”. It’s almost always faster for me.
    I think the problem here really is that whoever times the lights in Davis does a terrible job (And they are going to get a big fat pension for life!). Many lights aren’t on sensors (so you have to sit and wait when you are the only car) or are designed bizarrely (left turn only from only one way on a four way intersection? WHY?) Or they are just time terribly from one to the next. I lived in Woodland for a while and most lights are on sensors, so except at around 4 pm you rarely have long to wait.

  3. Carrie

    I no longer live in Davis, but if I visit, I take 113 to Covell to get to Stonegate where my main visiting takes place…avoiding all but 2 lights on Covell. If I decide to go to the farmer’s market on Saturday, I prefer to park a ways away and enjoy the walk. The congestion nearby is insane. When I lived in Davis I recall a building limit/cap on homes; however, it feels like they’ve perhaps removed that and allowed a considerably high number of residences to be erected (or maybe I’ve been gone so long it just feels that way). Either way, these additions include schools, shopping centers, parks and all the trimmings, which should, in turn, require a re-evaluation/revamp on the road systems.
    I do recall fondly my summers at Happy Horse Riding School and riding my bike after camp to the Mansion Deli for frozen Yogurt. What an experience that was, as well as riding my bike from home in south Davis over the overpass by Murder Burger to take in a movie at Varsity Twin. Thanks for the post and I hope the City figures it out!

  4. Elizabeth Griswold

    I like the idea of the walking/biking only, in downtown Davis. This worked for K-Street area in Sacramento. Where would the parking be diverted? Would they build another parking garage? I think the paid parking lot between E and D should be removed and a green space made, and used for events, similar to the holiday parade and tree lighting. With more benches and it already has beautiful trees! Also add in more bike racks in the free space. I think there can be a good analysis of the paid parking in a garage vs meter ditchers who take a chance and don’t pay! If I can pay park in a designated parking lot and walk or bike safely to my destination I am all for that! I don’t like the struggle to find parking in downtown Davis. I like your article and think these are a start of ideas for the traffic issues!
    On the city of Davis website today is the last day for virtual input for ‘Envision Davis’, community workshop.
    A downside, it could push parking over onto other streets, creating more crosswalk issues in those neighborhoods.

  5. Colin Walsh

    Please submit ideas about downtown Davis. Today is the last day to to participate in this survey
    http://www.cityofdavis.org/EnvisionDowntownDavis
    learn more here
    http://www.davisite.org/2018/06/envision-downtown-davis.html

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