Saturday, December 6, 2025

Coronado Icon Up For Grabs

Two Coronado icons – the Hotel Del and the 1924 beer truck known as, “Olive Oyl.”

Coronado Brewing Company’s
Model T Beer Truck To Be Sold

CORONADO – She turns 90 this year, is one of the most familiar gals in Coronado, and yet the 1924 Model T beer truck, “Olive Oyl,” is for sale and may be leaving Coronado forever.

The iconic green Model T is owned by the Coronado Brewing Company. The truck can be seen cruising up and down Orange Avenue, Ocean Boulevard, and all streets in between, distinctive as much for it’s sound as its looks.

The historic truck has participated in eight car shows and 16 parades over the past six years; has been featured on numerous magazine covers and television shows.

Coronado publicist and local historian, Joe Ditler, has been driving the truck daily, and boasts 100 miles a week when the weather is good. “It’s an unbelievable advertising vehicle, if you’ll excuse the play on words,” said Ditler. “I’m sure the truck has paid for itself twice over as a promotion for CBC, but now that the international beer side of their business is growing, they are cutting back on local promotions, and that means selling the truck.”

The 90-year-old Model T is probably driven more than any Model T, anywhere in the world, said Ditler. Typically he would use the truck to run business errands during the day, restaurant hop at night, and then pile his surfboards in the back for the weekend.

More surfboard sticks out of the truck than is in, reminiscent of a Murf the Surf cartoon.

“It’s a real chick magnet,” said Ditler. “But the chicks are usually in their 80s. And that’s okay, because I’m a sucker for history, and whenever I see old folks looking longingly at the truck, I usually pull over and stop to talk to them.

“They almost always have an incredible story about a Model T from their youth, and I never tire of hearing about it. The first year I began driving the truck I had this epiphany,” said Ditler. “These are the last people on the planet who have a first-hand memory or experience with a Model T. Once they’re gone, it will be, ‘Oh, I saw one in a movie once,’ or ‘I saw one in a parade once.’ So I have definitely been enjoying the first-hand stories from these folks, and I’m all the richer for having shared in their experiences. And yes, I almost always take them for a ride.”

Believed to be taken in the Roaring Twenties, this photo says it all about

the Colorado ranch truck known now as Coronado’s iconic beer truck.

Mounted with a musical calliope in the back, the truck was a parade favorite in the 1970s,

in her then-home of Colorado.

The Model T is a 1924 C-Cab truck with the original four-cylinder motor in it. It’s been converted from six-volt to 12 to give her more consistent starting on cold mornings. But most of the truck is original – wood spoke wheels, hand-crank starter, foot pedals, steering column accelerator lever – although it has an electric starter.

Ditler chased down the truck’s history as best he could. “It started out as a ranch truck in Colorado,” he said. “I have one photo from the Roaring Twenties showing the truck with a saddle draped over the engine cowling, a cowboy sitting on the roof, and a horse in the back. Another photo from the 1970s shows the truck painted bright orange with a calliope in the rear.”

Olive Oyl, a familiar Coronado sight to locals, is to be sold. The truck has been a fixture on Coronado streets for the past six years. Photo courtesy of Scott Rieckens.

Olive Oyl, the 1924 iconic Model T truck, is seen here at a July Fourth Parade with popular TV weatherman and jazz musician Dave Scott. Joe Ditler is driving.

Leslie Lopez (left) and Brandi Williams of KUSI TV were recent guests in the Model T for the Coronado Christmas Parade. Other celebs riding in the truck have included Ken Kramer, Mike Castellucci, Admiral Joe Rizza, NY Yankee Joe DiGangi, and Dave Scott, among others.

The truck came to San Diego in 2006 and to Coronado in 2008. Named “Olive Oyl,” the light green Tin Lizzie with purple trim and mermaid logo has become one of the most familiar sights on the island. Her “putt putt putt” of the engine and “Awooga” of the horn have become part and parcel with her looks.

Ditler calls her “the happy car,” claiming that no matter how foul your mood, when people see her, it’s all smiles and laughter. The truck has participated in eight car shows and 16 parades throughout Coronado and San Diego over the past half dozen years, hosting numerous TV celebrities and historic people. She’s been on magazine covers and featured on dozens of TV programs.

“I would love to see the truck stay in Coronado,” said Ditler. “While she is officially being advertised across the country for sale, it would be nice to see another Coronado business recognize the advantage of having such an elegant little head turner like this on our streets. And because there are no hills here, you literally can log 100 miles a week. That’s a lot of advertising bang for your buck.”

“The Happy Truck” is what the Model T is known as. She brings smiles to the faces of all who see her.

For more information, contact Joe Ditler at (619) 435-0767,

or write [email protected].



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Joe Ditler
Joe Ditler
Joe Ditler is a professional writer, publicist and Coronado historian. Formerly a writer with the Los Angeles Times, he has been published in magazines and newspapers throughout North America and Europe. He also owns Part-Time PR (a subsidiary of Schooner or Later Promotions), specializing in helping Coronado businesses reach larger audiences with well-placed public relations throughout the greater San Diego County. He writes obituaries and living-obituaries under the cover "Coronado Storyteller,” capturing precious stories of our friends, neighbors, veterans and community stalwarts. To find out more, write or call [email protected], or (619) 742-1034.

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