Toronto Star

A Sunday drive is ‘an escape’ for some, even if health officials warn against it,

Public health says don’t, but hitting the open road good for you and the car

- KEVIN MCGRAN STAFF REPORTER

Is it safe to simply go for a drive amid the pandemic? Toronto Public Health recommends against it.

But there’s no question people are doing it as a way to break out of the monotony, get out of the house and feel safe within their own bubble.

“We drove to Clarkson, a great view of the Toronto skyline,” said Wally Jaroslawsk­i of Mississaug­a. “We snapped a picture and we were sitting in the car. In the hour we sat there, there must have been five or 10 cars coming in and out and doing the same as us.”

Toronto Public Health doesn’t recommend going for drives unless it’s for an essential service. It continues to advise everyone to “stay home and only leave the house for essential trips such as shopping for groceries, picking up medicine, going to an urgent medical appointmen­t, attending work as an essential worker, or to exercise,” the agency said in a statement.

Still, some in the GTA are using their cars in unusual ways that go beyond grocery shopping: for drive-by birthday parties or to line roads during funeral procession­s. And for just getting out of the house.

For Jaroslawsk­i and his wife, Stacey Stevens, going for drives lets them feel normal.

“Getting in the car and driving

— we did Caledon, we did Welland — it’s an escape,” said Jaroslawsk­i, a software consultant. “We get dressed up to feel like we’re going out. It feels like you’re human.”

Taking your car out for a Sunday drive — or any day of the week, really — is a good idea on two fronts: neither cars nor people are meant to sit idle for long.

“You can crank open the sunroof, open your windows and drive around and get some fresh air and feel like you’re escaping and seeing some things,” said Steve Joordens, a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto Scarboroug­h with expertise in the impact of prolonged isolation. “If they felt like they needed to get out, of the alternativ­es that are available to them, that would be probably one of the least problemati­c.”

So while even careful pleasure drivers are ignoring health recommenda­tions, they might find the tradeoff for the mental health break to be worth it.

“If someone felt like they were cooped up and felt they needed to get out and see something different or see something green, I can see no reason not to,” Joordens said, adding there are pressures and stresses of staying at home and feeling isolated. People naturally need a certain amount of “interestin­gness” in their lives, he said.

“We need something a little interestin­g, a little different. If it can be satisfied in a way that’s not going to have any negative effects, then get out there and go somewhere where you maybe get a nice view, or whatever it may be that you’re craving.”

Joordens and his wife, Sue, are avid motorcycli­sts. They visited family over the weekend in Oshawa and Ajax, stopping on the street while their children and grandchild­ren chatted from the porch.

He’s seen others do it, too, whether for drive-by birthday parties, tributes to health-care workers or just tapping into memories of that teenage you, back when you got your licence.

“There’s something about a car,” Joordens said. “Freedom I guess is the word. You get in it, pick your own course, cover a lot of ground and see your own stuff.”

The drive will be just as good for the car. When a car sits for more than a couple of weeks, batteries can lose their charge, tires can develop flat spots, gas tanks can accumulate moisture. Rodents and pests might find a new home.

Ideally, a car should be driven at least once every two weeks. That will help the tires, clear out the power plant and charge the battery.

If the car is going to sit idle for longer, there are alternativ­es, said Kaitlynn Furse, director of communicat­ions for CAA Central Ontario.

A battery tender can help keep the battery charged while not in use.

A fuel stabilizer will stop moisture from building up.

Adding10 PSI to the tire pressure will help prevent flat spots, but would need to be reduced when driving resumes.

“Or you can just go for a drive,” Furse said. “Going for a 20-minute drive every week or two is probably sufficient.”

Recently, Jaroslawsk­i and Stevens took their 2015 Audi to Welland to celebrate the 91st birthday of Jaroslawsk­i’s mother, Lucy, who is in self-isolation in a senior’s facility.

Fortunatel­y, she was on the ground floor and they could see her through the sealed window, Jaroslawsk­i said. “I’ve never seen my mom so appreciati­ve because she can’t see anybody in there. She hadn’t seen anyone in maybe two weeks.”

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR ?? “If someone felt like they were cooped up and felt they needed to get out and see something different … I can see no reason not to,” said Steve Joordens, a psychology professor at U of T.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR “If someone felt like they were cooped up and felt they needed to get out and see something different … I can see no reason not to,” said Steve Joordens, a psychology professor at U of T.

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