Seasons 1-3 were the only ones really worth watching. Even then it was just barely passable. IMO the only guys worth following in season one were Jay, TJ and Alex. Season 2 would have been Eric, Bear, and the Mullen rig moving crew. Don't remember who was in S3.
Watching ice road truckers and...
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Gunner75, Oct 5, 2017.
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Rookies, Wannabees, & superheroes. This is a true run about Heavy Haul.Grubby, x1Heavy, TripleSix and 1 other person Thank this. -
The Mullens guys were awesome. If i were Canadian, i would want to drive for Mullen. The rig move across frozen ocean was awesome.cke Thanks this. -
all that yelling and screaming on the axeman show is too much
i noticed on ice road truckers every truck that goes by is laying on the airhorn and when they unhook the glad hands air is always coming out.
they always get out and look at the ice even though their gonna drive on it no matter whatx1Heavy Thanks this. -
Or purchase some surplus LCAC's and aircushion the ones that cannot be bridged adequately.
I know that Canada prides themselves in being good with what little they have, but the lake crossings etc is unnecessary. That simply shows that they will not spend some money to bridge them or build adequate roads to the new communities that are building.
Maybe it is tribal and private in nature and not a Canadian Govt Problem. I don't know.
In the last show, Art actually went into the bunk waiting for night to freeze his crossing some more. For HIM to not go across now as crazy as he seems to be hell hath frozen over. -
In very simple terms; open up Google Maps, draw a diagonal line from where Alaska meets Yukon at the Beaufort Sea to Toronto. Everything south of that line is more land than water, everything north of that line is more water than land. Zoom in on a few areas and you will see what I mean.
So, the first concern is the sheer magnitude of the number of water crossings. The second part is the vastness of some of those crossings. And the third issue is the muskeg, swamp and other unconsolidated lands in between. That is the reason we do the bulk of northern work in the winter; so everything, including the land, is frozen. It is also the reason that northern all-weather roads weave across the landscape... following the path of least resistance.
I have spent most of my adult life living and working in the north. It is very empty and the cost of doing things--like building all-weather roads--is enormous. Challenge number four. A good example is the soon-to-be-open Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk Highway: 120 km (~75 miles), $300 million. Forty-plus years to plan, four years to build. Yes, you are right that Indigenous issues are a significant part of the process (and ever-increasingly, environmental concerns).
I'll do the math for you, that's a little over $4 million per mile.
And that gets you a narrow, two-lane gravel road with single-lane bridges.
And 80% of the Canadian population lives within 200 km of our southern border with the U.S.
Last edited: Oct 6, 2017
Reason for edit: A picture is worth...Oxbow, 4mer trucker, TripleSix and 5 others Thank this. -
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We can't even access a lot of the wellpads around here in summer. Too swampy. Cut a trail in the bush once the muskeg freezes. Flood it, grade it flat and work until thaw. And we're only really in the middle of the province in terms of latitude. Yellowknife is a couple hundred kilometers further north than we are.
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