New to OTR and I sort of hate it
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by prosidius, Feb 12, 2017.
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One other tip, when you are sitting in truck stops or loading docks, watch all the other trucks. Watch how they set up their backs, how they maneuver, and watch for any mistakes they make and learn from that.
DoubleO7 Thanks this. -
Do yourself a favor and back into a parking spot every time you go to truck stop for more than fuel. Backing stress will ease the more practice you get. The sooner you get that practice the less time you will spend worrying about backing. Some lazy drivers avoid backing and even 5 years later they can't back better than a rookie with his eyes closed. -
bottomdumpin and ExOTR Thank this.
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DoubleO7 Thanks this.
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Trucking is like any other job. You have to put in the time to move up the proverbial ladder. I started out being gone a month or 2 at time, while being in a new relationship. We stuck it out. Been married ever since. Moved to a different company after 5 months that got me home every weekend. Yes a truckers weekend is get home tired Friday night exhausted and leave tired on Sunday from the partying or the work you caught up on at home. It's hard to leave the house, I admit that. But once on the road, things get better.
After the job of home on weekends, switched companies angain. Got local work. Longer hours, less pay. Even at $15.00 an hour. Only home long enough to sleep. Then back to the grind.
A few companies later, with similar results, I bought a truck. This was after 7 years as a company driver learning and studying. Now 10 years later, with all equipment paid for, I work when I want for as long or short as I want. Been off since before Christmas. Might go back in a week or two. Depends on how I feel.
The secret with home time is quality. I remember being on corporate America, working 40-80 hours a week. Getting home tired. Hating the work. The evenings at home went by as fast as a truckers weekend. Two weeks vacation per year. Screw that. I take time whenever I want.
I, like so many others, have embraced the trucker lifestyle. The freedom, office with windows & great views. Climb the proverbial ladder and enjoy the ride.IAM KING, PizzaGuy805 and scottlav46 Thank this. -
Payback to the trainer; find a new job then when Prime calls, say the trainer fired me and told me to clean my stuff out of the truck, then took my set of keys.
Veryblessed, bottomdumpin and scottlav46 Thank this. -
My opinion wasn't requested, but I'll offer it anyway
If I didn't have a daughter I'd still be OTR. It takes about 6 months to figure out the lanes you like, and the truck stops you like to stop at.
Training sucks imo, but the solo driver life is pretty nice. Once you have an apu and a decent setup for food and entertainment, you'll feel more at home in the sleeper than "at home". It's worth spending 300$ on a great mattress for the truck if you don't slip seat, and some decent carpet pads for the bunk.
Get past your training, and find a carrier that fits your running pattern. -
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Apart from getting the guns out of storage and blowing through a couple hundred dollars worth of ammo at the range, there isn't much I will be doing at home that I wouldn't be doing in the truck. TV, PS4, net surfing etc I can all do while on the road.
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Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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