Most of the replies to the threads that you started a year ago probably still ring true. If you’re wanting to stay in the middle of the country that expecting to stay out of Chicago isn’t really feasible. You may not be picking up or delivering there but expecting to run the center of the country you won’t be able to flat out avoid it. Unless your plans changed from last year the hurdles you will face in addition to lack of recent driving employment will be not having a home base to speak of and wanting to live in the truck.
Companies That Avoid Both Coasts?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by insipidtoast, Mar 16, 2024.
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Bud A., bryan21384, 201 and 1 other person Thank this.
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Two problems is most dry van companies are more prone to running a smaller radius than reefer outfits, at least in my experience. If you go to a larger dry van outfit, you'll be far more prone to Chicago and coasts with less say on how you run.
Second problem is the market's down and you've been out of the truck a while. You're having to hope the company you like is hiring and can even hire you.
With that said, the only companies that come to mind that I rarely see on either coast and typically west of the Mississippi with some non-reefer freight is Gamer Logistics out of El Paso, MVT out of Las Cruces, and the odd ball is Foltz Trucking, which is a medium sized hopper company out of Minnesota. And theres H&M trucking out of Nebraska, I believe. I doubt any completely avoid Chicago, but I didn't see them much when I drove for a Joliet company.
Besides that, you'll probably be cherry picking from mom and pop companies that won't be able to hire you until you get recent experience.Bud A., bryan21384, insipidtoast and 2 others Thank this. -
Chicago really ain't that bad, compared to some east coast cities....like Baltimore, where I started my driving career, and Philly, where I delivered at LEAST once a week.
If you run midwest regional, it will be impossible to avoid Chicago completely.Bud A., bryan21384, 201 and 1 other person Thank this. -
You might be able to pull it off with a regional position, Mid-South comes to mind, but those are harder to come by these days, even for drivers with recent experience. You'd probably have to take whatever you could get for the time being. Are you back in the U.S.? If so, you could check out CFI and PTL. I haven't checked recently but they were running a Mid-South last year, and both offered refreshers. If I'm not mistaken, PTL has a free rider-policy, but don't quote me on that. Their pay is low too.
Last edited: Mar 17, 2024
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I did work for DHT in the past, and it actually got kind of annoying after a while always driving through the southern part of the USA on the same lanes all the time. -
Do you know anything about Green Products trucking company?
Didn't you used to work for DHT? I'm curious what your trajectory has been since leaving them? Personally I just did a short stint with H&M afterwards, which made me realize how much I'd missed exploring other parts of the country while at DHT. -
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Another company I thought of is Trekker. I don't know their actual running lanes, but I mostly see them in the plains states and CO and I've only seen them with dry vans, so they might be close to what you're wanting.
There's Cedarpoint trucking out of Idaho as well. They do reefer freight, but it's mostly potatoes, which won't have the reefer screaming 24/7 like meat and ice cream haulers. Not sure what else, but I liked their running lanes, equipment, and location when I inquired a couple years ago.
I've been at Climate Express for the last 9 months or so and pretty happy overall. Mix of dry van and reefer, but the majority of the reefer loads are 40-55 degree start/stops, so it barely ever kicks on in the spring and fall. I'd say only <10% of the loads are true reefer loads like most imagine and very few are produce. We haul taters, but very little produce otherwise. Pretty much exclusively out and back from MO. Vast majority of the loads are to SC/GA, PA, WI/MN, TX, and CO, so it's a nice variety without dealing with too much of a harsh winter. I wish we went out to the mountain west more, but enough variety to keep me happy anyways. I'm averaging like 2800-3200 miles a week, in a new truck with an APU, and it's laid back, so I'll be here a while.
I'll give DHT credit, they easily have some of the best running lanes in the industry for solo drivers, IMO.RockinChair, Blagoje, insipidtoast and 1 other person Thank this. -
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