Saturday, April 28, 2007

Time off in Virginia Beach

A small bit of blog housekeeping:  one of the nice things about blogs is that they enable readers to leave comments and there can be quite a bit of interaction on blogs that are active.  Terry and I would love to read any comments, thoughts or feedback you might have, especially as we add features from time to time (like pictures) to improve things a bit.  I know several of you who read this blog are new to computers or to blogs and might not know how to do that.

From the main page, if you read an article you'd like to comment upon, click the highlighted word "comments" at the bottom and that will take you to a page where you can leave your comments.  

A couple of notes about comments:  I have set it up so that any comments have to be reviewed before they appear on the blog, so your comment might not show up for several days.  It just depends on how soon I'm online again.  Also, if you choose to leave any comments, please at least include your first name.  I'm going to disable posting anonymously just because we'd like to know who's posting comments.

Now, to the regular blog entry, from Virginia Beach, Virginia:

It is five weeks after first getting in our truck to begin our journeys:  we have driven 28,000 miles, through 39 states, and have enjoyed most of those miles.  

When we were talking about driving as a team, Terry and I both agreed that one advantage of our situation was that we didn't have the necessity to schedule regular time at home the way we would if we had family obligations or small children.  In that regard, one of our goals was to stay out for longer periods of time (I did this when I drove solo for a year with Schneider before).  This would (hopefully) let us get better loads more consistently.  And it would mean more money.  Not having the aggravation or expense of maintaining a traditional house or a apartment is also something that went into that equation.  

In a previous entry, I mentioned that we would eventually like to take some days off near the Grand Canyon to visit there.  I've also mentioned that we are going to a Norah Jones concert at Red Rocks in Colorado the first weekend in June also.  

However, our first official time off finds us in Virginia Beach, Virginia (I know:  after the last entry, you are surprised that we didn't request our time off in New Jersey somewhere, but that will have to wait until another time).  Terry's son, Elliott, is in the Navy and stationed in Norfolk.  Terry hadn't seen him since last year, and Elliott is about to go on another deployment, so Terry wanted to take a day to come through here to spend some time with him.  I also have a nephew, Justin, in the Navy who is stationed here.

So, a couple of weeks ago, we requested one day off in the Norfolk area.  But, the way it works out is that we finished our last load early yesterday afternoon and we don't have to leave before noon on Sunday, so in effect we've had two full days off here.  We weren't sure if we would have a trailer or just our truck, but it worked out the best way possible and we just had our truck when we finished yesterday.

Elliott has a friend whose girlfriend works at a very nice hotel right on the beach in Virginia Beach, on Atlantic Avenue.  Elliott was able to get us a room in this very nice hotel at a very good price -- so here we are.  We have had a very relaxing time so far, and enjoyed some nice visting and sight-seeing.  And what sights!

Last night, Terry, Elliott, Justin, and I ate a nice meal at a very over-priced restaurant near the hotel and then went down the street to shoot some pool.  We had fun.  It's a good thing that having fun isn't dependent upon winning.  That's all I will say about my pool playing.

We did laundry earlier today, and at this moment, Terry and Elliott are enjoying some good father-son time out on the beach, and I'm enjoying some good time to myself outside of the truck.  It's good to have time occasionally to be able to decompress, unwind, relax and sort of recharge.  

Until next time . . . go ahead and envy me . . . I'm going out on the balcony to enjoy listening to the ocean waves coming in . . . and remember to keep the wheels rollin' but to occasionally stop those wheels for a break . . .

Allan

Saturday, April 21, 2007

A Day in the Life

Four weeks into our journey as a team, we have covered over 23,000 miles and close to 40 states, and have found teaming to be a lot like we thought it would be -- and a lot different.  In general, things are going well for us -- we are getting lots of miles, good money, and we are getting to see the most beautiful parts of this great country.

For this entry, I thought it might be interesting for those of you following the blog to cover a 24-hour period of life on the road.  Of course, no day is typical, but the 24-hours from yesterday (Friday, April 20, 2007) contain many elements that are common to many of our days.

To give you some context, I am writing this on Saturday evening just after we changed shifts at the Schneider Operating Center in Edwardsville, Illinois, just across the river from St. Louis.  We are driving through St. Louis headed for southern California -- our third trip there since starting our adventures.  Of course, my perspective is my own, and I will emphasize things that Terry would not, and he would focus on things I will not.  You know that, but I'm saying it anyway.

Friday, at midnight, finds Terry driving through Pennsylvania on I-80, on our way to deliver a load in Massachusetts (oh yay!) later that day.  We had picked the load up in Michigan Thursday afternoon.  Terry started driving Thursday afternoon in Seville, Ohio.

I'm sleeping in the bunk.  I usually do more napping than sleeping, but my sleep has gotten more restful and I'm sleeping for longer periods the longer we are on the road.  I usually wake up a couple of times, and sometimes I'll come up front and ride for a while.  

I think some of our best interaction as friends (not as members of a team working together; that's different; I'm talking about the dimension of our friendship that stretches back over 20 years, not the working element that goes back only a month) happens during these late-night stretches over open road.  We share our thoughts, concerns for those we love, solve the world's problems (if only they were awake to listen!), delve into those deepest waters that only those who have known each other in terms of decades can explore.

As I type this, I am imagining Terry's description of that paragraph:  "Sometimes Allan wakes up, stumbles up front -- why, I don't know -- and interrupts the perfect quiet of my solitude with half-asleep rambling that doesn't make a lick of sense.  I grunt 'uh-huh' every few moments and think about the woman I saw in the laundrymat the other day in Dallas . . ."

By midnight, Terry has already driven several hundred miles.  He usually stops a couple of times for short breaks to stretch his legs, and sometimes stops for a meal if he can find a place to park in those wee-morning hours.  He spends some of the night in quiet reflection, and some of it listening to whatever appeals to him on XM radio.

Around 4:30 in the morning, he has been at the wheel between 9 and 10 hours and has driven somewhere close to 500 miles.  We are in New York state on I-84.  He knows it's time to switch shifts.  I've been awake for a little while, and have slept about as well as I ever have in the truck.

We usually take a little time to change shifts.  There is paperwork to do, coffee to buy, things to switch around (my stuff from the passenger side to the driver's side and Terry's stuff over there), inspection of the truck and trailer.  There is more to driving a truck than just holding the steering wheel and watching out for people in four-wheelers (what we call anything that isn't a truck) who can't drive.

It's funny how naturally we all fall into our little routines and habits.  After only a month on the road, I have certain places I like to have things, certain things I like to do and in a certain order. I have my coffee (properly sweetened and flavored with French vanilla creamer if I can find it wherever we are stopped), my diet soda for later, some things within reach to munch on, and perhaps most important for me, the XM radio tuned and my mp3 player ready to play some tunes.

In about half an hour, we are rolling.  Terry usually goes right back to the bunk and quickly falls asleep.  He has gotten into a good pattern of sleeping in the truck, and usually gets some good solid sleep in one stretch of time.  He will usually wake up sometime before noon and stay up for a little while before going back to sleep for a while.   At some point, hot coffee becomes a large part of the equation for him in getting fully awake.

It takes me a little while to get into my groove driving.  Maybe half an hour or so.  Then (usually) the miles pass quickly.  Before I know it, I'm passing through Hartford, Connecticut, during morning rush hour (it's not too bad, and that part of Connecticut is beautiful).  Somewhere soon after 200 miles (some days more quickly, depending on how I'm feeling), I stop for a break, possibly refill my coffee or soda.  If there is a Subway or something where I stop, I'll sometimes grab a sandwich during that first break.  I walk around and stretch a little bit just to loosen up.

After a few minutes, it's time to roll again.  

Late morning finds us in Massachusetts -- Norwich.  I've driven a little less than 400 miles.

Earlier that morning, we had gotten our next load assignment on the little terminal attached to the satellite in the truck.  We were supposed to go up to New Milford, Connecticut, to pick up a load going to Green Bay.  The load couldn't deliver before Sunday morning, and we would arrive in Green Bay early Saturday afternoon, so we were looking forward to a little break and some downtime Saturday night.  We were already planning our things to do while we were there.

The directions we were given by Schneider's computer have us going down a very narrow residential street to get to the place we were supposed to deliver.  A couple of times, I was a little leery of some low-hanging wires, and I thought, "trucks were never meant to be on this road."

When we got to the place we were delivering, I asked the lady who was checking us in if there was another way out that was better for trucks.  There was, thankfully.

By this time, Terry's been up a while, and we are talking about our downtime in Green Bay this weekend.  It's about 11:30 or so if I remember correctly.

It was about 150 miles to New Milford, Connecticut, where we were picking up the load going to Green Bay.  Or thought we were.

We had been to the place in New Milford about a week earlier in the middle of the night, so we knew where it was.  That always makes things easier.

We got there and I went inside to find out which trailer we were supposed to take.  The only thing I had was a number that the folks in the shipping office would use to give me the information I needed.

The man in the shipping office looked up the information I had given him on his computer, looked up at me a couple of times, and then asked if I could repeat the number.

I knew we were going to have a problem when he asked me to repeat the number.

I did, and it was what he had pulled up.  That load, he said, wasn't even scheduled to leave until Tuesday of the following week.  

So all we had was a number to take up to Green Bay.  I'm not sure they would have been happy with that, so we called Schneider to see what was going on.  

You would be surprised (unless you are a truck driver) how much of a truck driver's life is spent waiting.  Just waiting.  Waiting in traffic.  Waiting at shippers.  Waiting at deliveries.  Waiting on the phone to talk to someone at Schneider.

You either learn to wait or you get very frustrated and will probably find something else to do besides drive a truck -- or at least something else to do besides wait.  

The wait for someone at Schneider actually wasn't that long, but it seems longer when all you've got to show for a 150-mile drive is a useless number, no trailer, and nowhere to go with what you don't have.

We were able to verify that the load details had indeed been changed (the shipper evidently decided to do that and didn't inform Schneider), so we were not going to Green Bay after all.  

So we waited for our next assignment to come across the satellite to the terminal in the truck.  It didn't take long.

We were to go to Fair Lawn, New Jersey, to pick up a load going to (yay!) California!  Over 2800 miles one way -- just the kind of load we love.

If you look at a map, you can see where New Milford, Connecticut is, and where Fair Lawn, New Jersey is.  The shortest way to get there is through New York City.

And so it was that on Friday afternoon, during rush hour, our orange truck was crossing the George Washington Bridge to get from New York City over to New Jersey.  

Are we having fun at this point in our little adventure?  The correct answer is:  no, not really.

For the time of day and where we were, we actually made pretty good time through NYC and New Jersey.  We got off the exit on I-80 where we were supposed to go pick up our trailer.  

The directions we were provided by Schneider worked great until we got to the part of River Road (aptly named, it turns out) that was closed due to flooding.  There was a barricade in front of us, and large DETOUR sign pointing to the right.  Of course, that was the only sign and there was no mention of where to take a large truck in this situation.

After about half an hour of driving around and a call to the place were going, we finally made it to the place we were supposed to be.  It was getting too late in the day to be stuck in a strange place -- especially if that place is called New Jersey.

We unhooked from the empty trailer we had brought with us and found the trailer we were supposed to take.  Loaded with almost 37,000 pounds, one of the first things we discovered was that one of the tires was flat.  

This is the point in the story where you go and wonder if being a truck driver is really fun after all.  And you wonder, after thinking about where you are, if New Jersey is really the place you want to be as it gets dark on a Friday night.  You don't waste a lot of time wondering about these things.  You can wonder about them after you are away from New Jersey and New York, back in a tamer part of the world.

We decided that we could make it to a truck stop up the road to have the tire repaired.  It's funny how the sun going down on you in New Jersey can help you reach such a decision.

So, we are driving away from the customer following the directions on the computer in the truck since it didn't have us going on the road that was flooded.  

However, after a few blocks, we ran into another problem.  The directions we were given had us on a road.  In front of us, several blocks ahead, is an overpass.  On that overpass is a big yellow sign warning people (especially people in big orange trucks with heavy trailers that have a flat tire just before dark on Friday during rush hour) that it is only 12 feet 6 inches tall.  

How tall are we sitting up high in our big orange truck?  Hmmm . . . 13 feet 6 inches tall.  

That is too tall to fit under this overpass we are staring at, even in New Jersey on Friday during rush hour as it's getting dark.  Maybe especially then.

What to do?  

Terry, ever the able navigator, especially after having his coffee, has the solution:  "Turn here and see where this goes."

So that's what we do.

By the way, we also have a GPS navigation system that is usually helpful -- except in New Jersey when you are in a truck and not in a car.  But at least, we knew generally which way to go to get back to I-80 and the way (O Happy Day!) out of New Jersey in the falling darkness.

One such road we turned on after narrowly escaping finding out just how tall we were was blocked up ahead with an accident.  There was a nice New Jersey police officer (yes, they have them there) who told us where to go.

It just so happened that this was exactly the road we needed to be on to take us to I-80.  And we took it.

Fast forward about an hour to the TA truck stop in Columbia, New Jersey -- just four wonderful miles from Pennsylvania.  It is about -- well, it's dark.  I'm tired.  Terry is tired.  We cross the scales to make sure our weight is evenly distributed (we are okay) and then Terry takes care of arranging to have the tire on the trailer repaired.  

It is time for our shift change.  Well, I was ready for our shift change as we crossed the George Washington Bridge with all nice folks from New York and New Jersey.

Anyway, by about 9:30 pm, the tire is fixed, and Terry is ready to take us out of New Jersey.  So, he gets behind the steering wheel, and I climb in the bunk and dream of being in hell.  I don't know why.

Midnight finds Terry driving once more through Pennsylvania.  To California.  And away from New York and New Jersey.  That guy's got a great sense of direction.

Now you've spent a day in the truck with us.  Oh, we're in New Jersey already -- I believe this is your stop.  Thanks for riding with us today.

Until next time . . . keep the wheels rolling -- west . . .
Allan

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Terry's first post: thoughts after 3 weeks

We've been on the road for 3 weeks.  We have traveled through 30 states.  We have put 17,600 miles on the truck, which works out to 838 per day on average.

Our original plan for shifts did not work.  Originally we had planned on doing a 12 x 12, Allan doing midnight to noon and me doing noon to midnight.  After trying to make it happen, we eventually gave up and have gone to something a bit more flexible, which has worked out with Allan getting us rolling at around 4:00 a.m. and then me taking over between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. and running until about 2:00 a.m. or so.  

No day is the same, but we always try to fit in some downtime -- usually between midnight and 4:00 a.m.  The problem with this is finding a safe and legal place to shut down, so sometimes our shift change takes place at the fuel island of a truck stop.

For us the key to being successful as a team has been communication and the ability to be flexible.  We both have our own opinions on how hard and fast we should run and inevitably we both voice concerns over making sure the other one is getting the rest they need.

We have also settled into somewhat of a routine of roles; Allan is more focused on the administrative side of things and I on the mechanical.  This compliment of abilities and motivations has helped us keep rolling efficiently and safely.

Living on the road as we do has led at times to the realization that when we have the opportunity to stop, we enjoy the scenery, or, as we are doing tonight in Roanoke, Virginia, to just take a little break.  We could have pushed on today, through the weather system, but since we are under no pressure to deliver, and once we do will be heading to Dallas for truck service and our annual Spring Training, we decided to let the weather move on and then optimize our driving time.

I'll have more to say from time to time, particularly of the beautiful places we've traveled.

Terry

Sunday, April 8, 2007

California Dreamin' & Making Plans

Most truck drivers, whether driving solo or team, live for long runs -- especially long runs out west.   For the second time in two weeks, we are headed west.  The first time, we left from Texas and drove out on I-40 through New Mexico and Arizona to Southern California.   That was a nice run, but we were on a pretty tight schedule and had to keep moving at a pretty constant pace.

This time, we have plenty of time, and the route we are taking is probably my favorite drive out west.  We left this morning (Easter Sunday) from Green Bay, Wisconsin, and are taking I-80 through Iowa and Nebraska, taking I-76 down to Denver, and then finishing up the run on I-70 through the beautiful Rockies in Colorado and Utah.  In Utah, we'll hit I-15 and go south through Utah, Nevada, and California.

For me, I-70 west of Denver all the way through western Colorado and Utah is probably my favorite stretch of road in the world driving a truck.  Except in winter, of course.  My first time driving through there a couple of years ago, I think I stopped at every single rest area just to take in the view, take pictures and video, and enjoy just being there.  

As I type this, Terry is driving, and we are on I-80 west of Des Moines (where we changed shifts) and will probably shut down for a little while somewhere in Nebraska before we head into Colorado.  It is cold (about 35 degrees), but the sun is shining and the countryside here is beautiful.  

Pardon me while I pinch myself again to make sure I'm really doing this and getting paid for it.

Yep, I'm awake alright.

I suppose I can write a little bit about downtime.  Terry and I are planning to stay on the road for long periods of time without a formal break, so it will be important for us to carve out little bits of time when we can to take a break from driving, just relax, and decompress a little bit.  We were able to do that last night for the first time, and it was wonderful.

We dropped a trailer in Wisconsin Saturday morning, and then had to go up to Green Bay to pick up a loaded trailer going to California (the load we are under right now).  We got to Green Bay yesterday afternoon, and because of the fact that we have plenty of time to get the load to SoCal (Southern California), we decided to just shut down until early this morning.  

One of the nice things about driving a truck and being in our situation (not having to worry about getting home to spouses or kids) is that we can choose when and where to spend our time away from the truck.  We both love the music of  Norah Jones and have talked about going to see her in concert if we get a chance.  Well, she's going to be at Red Rocks in Colorado in June, so we are going to make plans to take a couple of days around that time and go to see her and enjoy being in that area of Colorado.  I'll keep you posted.  How cool is it to be able to even think of doing that?  Wow!

I suppose I've rambled on enough for now, and my laptop has endured enough shaking from this rough road, so I will end things for now.

Until next time . . . keep the wheels rollin' . . .
Allan

 

Friday, April 6, 2007

Week 2: "Miles to go before I sleep . . ."

It is Friday night, April 6, 2007, as I type this entry while riding in the truck down US 30 near Sandusky, Ohio.  It is cold, overcast, and we have been driving a good part of the day in snow since leaving Ridgefield, New Jersey (that's always my favorite part about going to New Jersey:  leaving), on our way to Waukesha, Wisconsin.

Tonight marks two weeks on the road for us.  Over 11,000 miles and counting, some of the most beautiful scenery possible to view (my favorites from the past week:  Luray, Virginia, and the Shenandoah Valley, and all the beautiful places we were able to see out west), and getting used to life in a truck with another person.  

At times the past week, we have both heard the theme music from "The Odd Couple" playing.  

But, we are talking.  We are learning.  We are struggling.  We are laughing.  We are driving.

And, sometimes, we are sleeping.

This life we have chosen is good and we are very fortunate.

I am glad to be in this wonderful orange truck -- and I'm glad to be riding with my buddy Terry.

And, now, as darkness descends, and we enter some more nasty weather here in Ohio, I must end things for now.  

Until next time . . . with miles to go before I sleep . . . keep the wheels rollin' . . .
Allan